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First Look At Windows 7 Beta 1

The other A. N. Other writes "It seems that Microsoft couldn't keep the lid on Windows 7 beta 1 until the new year. By now, several news outlets have their hands on the beta 1 code and have posted screenshots and information about this build. ZDNet's Hardware 2.0 column says: 'This beta is of excellent quality. This is the kind of code that you could roll out and live with. Even the pre-betas were solid, but finally this beta feels like it's "done." This beta exceeds the quality of any other Microsoft OS beta that I've handled.' ITWire points out that this copy has landed on various torrent sites, and while it appears to be genuine, there are no guarantees. Neowin has a post confirming that it's the real thing, and saying Microsoft will be announcing the build's official availability at CES in January."

898 comments

  1. They're glowing! by sexybomber · · Score: 4, Funny

    The sound of ZDNet's Hardware 2.0 writers blowing their loads over this is deafening.

    1. Re:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Maybe you should consider a Macintosh. It's not for everyone, but a full Unix environment just a terminal away. If you like to program, the APIs (Cocoa, CoreAnimation, CoreGraphics, Display PDF, etc) are much cleaner and better designed than Windows or GTK (I haven't looked at Qt since the 90s so I won't comment on that). That's why I upgraded from Windows XP to OS X. (I still need to run a couple work-related programs under VirtualBox/Windows XP)

    2. Re:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux annoys the fucking life out of me.

      Windows annoys the fucking soul of out my eternal essence. That makes Linux win.

    3. Re:They're glowing! by mysidia · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's not hard to beat Vista.

      MS doing what it does best: lower expectations down to the gutter with a piece of s****.

      Then release a new piece of s**** disguised as a piece of candy, with some artificial flavoring to disguise some of the nasty taste.

      Compare: DOS 4.0 (sucky), DOS 5.0 (much better)

      Compare: DOS 6.0 (sucky), DOS 6.22 (much better)

      Compare: Windows 95 (sucky), then Windows 98 (much better).

      Windows ME (sucky), then Windows XP (much better)

      Windows Vista (sucky), Windows 7 (???)

    4. Re:They're glowing! by routerl · · Score: 2, Funny

      Anyone know what these people are so excited about?

      The graphics are slightly shinier?

      --
      Trust me, kids; don't drink and post.
    5. Re:They're glowing! by KozmoKramer · · Score: 1

      Most kids in emerging and modernizing future economic markets around the world are starting out with Linux. What will a United States look like in 20 years in a world where the rest of the world uses Linux, and the fatties in the US use Windows? A land of the Windows Tards will sure be an isolated land....

      --
      My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my Father! Prepare to die!
    6. Re:They're glowing! by EvanED · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I'm not the original poster, but I really wish Apple would let me. But they insist on selling OS X only with their own hardware, and then don't make hardware I both want and can afford. To my eyes, iMacs are stupid because it doesn't make sense to throw away a hundred or two hundred dollar monitor when you get a new computer. Hell, the bulk of my current system is about a year old, but I have components in there from 2004, and that's just what's in the main case. The Mac mini is probably even less upgradable than the iMac, and has for a moderately powerful system today is an underpowered processor and small amount of RAM. (For about $200 less what I paid for my current over a year ago, you get (1) dual core processor instead of quad core, (2) the same amount of RAM, (3) basically integrated graphics shared with main RAM instead of an 8800GTS. Wow, great deal.) Now at the other end is the Mac Pro. Beautiful systems, but start at twice the cost of my current system (this time I think about comparable in power), which is well out of my price range. Then you add on top of that the fact that I like to build my own system, and Apple has put itself out of my market. But I very well might actually get one if it weren't for those other problems.

      On the laptop side, last I checked they're in the same ballpark as a Thinkpad, so that's not so bad. But if I were to buy a laptop now, I'd probably get either like a netbook or a tablet... again, neither of which Apple sells.

      So from my standpoint, I'd love to run OS X... but I'm not going to pirate it, I'm not going to give Apple if they are going to call me a criminal for hacking it to run, I'm not going to buy Apple hardware, and Apple won't let me run it otherwise, so I'm out of luck on that point.

    7. Re:They're glowing! by LinuxLuver · · Score: 1

      Everyone who feeds on driving upgrades will be very keen on selling this one. Can't blame them for that. Meanwhile Ubuntu 8.10 Linux runs really well on an AMD Athlon 2200+ (1.6GHz) and 512MB of RAM with an interface comparable to MS' Aero.

      --
      Only boring people are ever bored.
    8. Re:They're glowing! by b4upoo · · Score: 1

      And where do they get their money from? There exists a great confusion over exactly what is paid advertising and what is reportage. Frankly i don't expect much good work being done by Microsoft. They have delivered crud on too many occasions.

  2. World domination 201 by Janek+Kozicki · · Score: 5, Interesting
    --
    #
    #\ @ ? Colonize Mars
    #
    1. Re:World domination 201 by houstonbofh · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Now the fate of 64bit future is being determined...

      Not really off topic. XP can not really do 64 bit. Vista is a resounding failure. 3.2-3.5 gig is not enough memory. If Win7 is not a solid product, Microsoft will loose the workstation and power user market.

    2. Re:World domination 201 by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1, Offtopic
      From the article:

      In the first release of this paper, we said "Vista is still 32-bit" â" and this was true when we wrote it. Now, in December 2006, there is, in fact, an x86_64 build on the Vista CD-ROM now shipping. But it doesn't actually work â" even Microsoft's own preferred development tools don't run on it. It is unclear how much of this is due to problems specific to the 64-bit port versus how much of it is generic to Vista. Nor does that distinction matter much; the point is, the codebase Microsoft is counting on to carry it into the 64-bit world has serious problems.

      It's really outdated badly. I have been using 64bit Windows from a long time at both home and work with nary a problem. Of course, I don't have an ancient printer with no 64bit drivers. But that's a problem with other OSes too. Linux/BSD might have it better coz they can recompile the OSS drivers into 64bit.

      --
      This space for rent.
    3. Re:World domination 201 by houstonbofh · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Vista is hated. Weather it is a technical failure or a PR failure is moot. No one wants it. And XP64 is not really functional at all. And God help you if you run a lot of general use software on either. The point is that the cliff is looming, and there is still not a clear winner. It could be that the economy is doing what no one else could; Slowing down the consumer.

    4. Re:World domination 201 by datapharmer · · Score: 4, Informative

      XP can do 64-bit just fine, and has been able to for several years; even before Vista came out.

      --
      Get a web developer
    5. Re:World domination 201 by AlexMax2742 · · Score: 1

      Nobody wants it, but they're getting it anyway and with the phase out of Windows XP uptake will only be getting quicker.

      You are insane if you think Microsoft is going to lose the workstation market anytime soon.

      --
      I'm the guy with the unpopular opinion
    6. Re:World domination 201 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      4GB of DDR2 (800MHz) costs less tahn 30 euros at retail, including taxes. It would be better to solder 4GB directly onto the mother boards, and save a couple of connectors. at least for cheap boards it would be plenty.

    7. Re:World domination 201 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Wow, what a load of crap that article is..

      The transition to 64 bit code is not nearly what the transition from 16-bit x86 to 32-bit was. 16-bit x86 applications were much different from what we run today. The programming model didn't have a flat address space. Programmers had to think about "near" vs "far" pointers. Writing assembly code was much more common, and protected mode much less. On the other hand the x86-64 model as seen by user space is largely identical to 32-bit, and in most cases is just as simple as a recompile.

      I don't know where he gets his information about 64-bit Windows, and the idea that amd64 versions of XP, Server, and Vista "don't work". 64-bit windows ships with 64 bit binaries and my experience is that WOW64 does work pretty well. But then he faults MS for the fact that some of their other stuff, like Visual Studio, run under WOW64... But Visual Studio is not Windows, the fact that some apps run in compatibility mode doesn't mean the OS isn't there, working, and ready.

      And this bit about Win32 being obsoleted by 64-bit CPUs... Well... Say what you want about Win32, but this is a non sequitur. I mean, 64-bit Linux's libc and system call interfaces, from a C programmer's point of view, are the same as the 32-bit ones. The same is true of 64-bit Windows APIs being the same as the 32-bit ones. This is an instance where ESR is faulting Windows in an area where it does the exact same thing Linux does. It sounds like he's just totally unaware of this fact.

    8. Re:World domination 201 by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      And XP64 is not really functional at all.

      Erm, why? I used an XP x64 workstation at work for two years, as a developer workstation - worked great. Since it runs 32-bit apps, what's the problem?

    9. Re:World domination 201 by iamwhoiamtoday · · Score: 1

      But it had WAY more program-compatibility issues then VISTA did. I was using XP64 for about a year before Vista came out, and I must say, I have had WAY less problems with Vista 64-bit then with XP64.

    10. Re:World domination 201 by Chang · · Score: 1

      I don't know about several years.

      WinXP x86_64 shipped in the spring of 2005 and Vista followed about a year and a half later in Jan 2007.

      Itanium 64-bit edition of WinXP shipped in 2003 but was later turned into abandonware - this version didn't run on EMT64 or AMD64 platforms so it saw minimal usage.

    11. Re:World domination 201 by PrescriptionWarning · · Score: 2, Interesting

      At work I use a 3 Ghz intel machine with 1 GB of RAM, one of the last IBM made workstation desktops. While I've never tried to run Vista on it I'm pretty certain that without an extra 1 GB of RAM and a newer Nvidia Quadro card, there's not a chance it would run it with the amount of speed I prefer while I'm coding with multiple windows open at the same time including but not limited to my browser, IM client, Lotus Notes, Rational Software Architect. Assuming what I've read is true, win 7 is just Vista with slightly better performance. But is it really going to be enough to justify getting the upgrade on my PC without substantial hardware upgrades? forget it.

    12. Re:World domination 201 by Kneo24 · · Score: 1

      Everyone likes to say that you'll buy bridges that don't exist when you claim to have used 64bit XP and not had any serious problems; at least this is the general response I'm given. I also get modded as a troll. Amazing.

      Anyway, the only issues I ever had with 64bit XP was that most of the free anti-virus solutions just did not want to support it (which really isn't true anymore). But if you're a responsible user, you probably don't get viruses anyway. Beyond that, just from normal use and gaming I never experienced problems. My HP printer even had beta drivers for it, which worked. I didn't have the full range of features that I had with it under 32bit XP, however I never used most of those options anyway.

      Sure, there probably are some legacy programs that didn't run on it, however those are largely irrelevant. Some of those legacy programs won't even run right on 32bit XP or even 2k anyway, so what's their point?

    13. Re:World domination 201 by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      That article is either way out of date, stuck in some kind of alternate-universe fantasy, or a mix of both.

      XP *can* do 64-bit, it has been able to for years now. (Since Vista was still called Longhorn.)

      Vista has *always* had a 64-bit edition, and it's *always* shipped in the same box as the 32-bit edition. (Note: I'm not sure if this is true of all Vista variations, but it certainly is of Home Premium, Business, and Ultimate, since I've had retail box copies of those at one point or another.)

      Additionally, there's no reason to install the 32-bit edition if Vista unless you:
      1) Have hardware with 32-bit-only drivers (no computer with the Vista logo on the box will have this.)
      2) Need to run 16-bit software.

      In any case, 2008 is 3 days away from ending, and Microsoft still has a commanding OS lead, so.

    14. Re:World domination 201 by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      I'm coding with multiple windows open at the same time including but not limited to my browser, IM client, Lotus Notes, Rational Software Architect.

      Lotus Notes is enough, alone, to bring any computer to its knees. Try using a groupware product that doesn't suck ass.

      That aside, while you're probably right, you could give Vista a try. Don't believe all the crap you hear on Slashdot, it might pleasantly surprise you. Although it seems like it's probably moot, since your workplace IT department will either switch your company or not, right? And if they use Lotus Notes, they're probably the type of IT department that still thinks Windows 2000 is "brand new."

    15. Re:World domination 201 by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      RAM is like 40$ per 8gig now. Graphics is not that important for vista.

      --
      This space for rent.
    16. Re:World domination 201 by PrescriptionWarning · · Score: 1

      actually the company I work for pulled out the option to use Vista earlier this year unless you provided a valid business reason for actually needing it. Oh and I have no choice but to use Lotus Notes, because I work for IBM.

    17. Re:World domination 201 by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Ah, using Lotus Notes makes sense at IBM. What really bugs me is the companies that *buy* Lotus Notes... your company has really, really good sales-people. I've had the misfortune to work at one before. (And, more to the point I think, knows how to sell to executives who don't actually use email.)

    18. Re:World domination 201 by scoot80 · · Score: 1

      Vista is hated? By.. who? The linux lovin' folk? Yes, you are right. But not many others. Vista is more stable than XP, looks pretty (A $1000 AUD machine (including 22" monitor) will run it great). My dad uses it, and finds it a lot easier to use than XP. He also never turns his machine off, and has never asked me for help with his computer (unlike when he was using XP). A few friends of mine are in IT, one does mostly MS stuff, the other does mostly linux stuff. Both use.. Vista on their home machines.

    19. Re:World domination 201 by Mista2 · · Score: 1

      Just a stupid question, what on the desktop are you doing that requires 64-bit desktop OS? On a server with a big database app, yes, 64 bit and huge memory access mkes sense, maybe some video editing/rendering, but nothing I do or any of my clients even stresses their current systems except running vista 8)
      We are onll looking at 64 bit on server that will be running Exchange 2007. Most big apps should offload their workload to servers which tend to have faster drives and system busses, and can be kept busy for more of their run time.
      A 64 bit desktop runnign mostly at less than 10% utilisation 95% of the time is just wasted resource.

    20. Re:World domination 201 by MadUndergrad · · Score: 1

      As someone who used xp 64-bit for two years: no, it can't. If you call that "just fine" you must be using windows 95 and liking it.

    21. Re:World domination 201 by glitch23 · · Score: 1

      FYI, weather != whether and loose != lose. People can mod this down for being off-topic if they want but it is also informative. Decisions, decisions.

      --
      this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    22. Re:World domination 201 by Wo1ke · · Score: 1

      You're not the workstation market. You're a coder. The workstation martket would look at your post and say 'wtf does that mean?' and go back to their windows machine.

    23. Re:World domination 201 by datapharmer · · Score: 1

      actually it did run on AMD64... Aka x86-64. In fact I ran it on AMD 64 when it first came out.

      --
      Get a web developer
    24. Re:World domination 201 by evol262 · · Score: 1

      No, you did not. IA64 is not byte-compatible with EMT64/AMD64.

      --
      "The more corrupt a society, the more numerous are its laws." -Tacticus
    25. Re:World domination 201 by Civil_Disobedient · · Score: 1

      I used an XP x64 workstation at work for two years, as a developer workstation - worked great.

      Same here. Using XP64 since it was available as a free download on MS. Stable as hell (and it should be, since it's based on the 2003 codebase but without the cruft).

      The biggest hurdle has been specialty drivers. Nikon, for instance, refuses to offer 64-bit drivers for their professional scanners. The *only* option (besides reverting your OS) is to install a 3rd-party program (VueScan). So, a 3rd party software company can somehow figure out how to write 64-bit drivers for hardware that the manufacturer themselves can't write drivers for? Sure, Nikon.

      SonicWall tried the same bullshit with their VPN client, at least until their business users cried bloody murder. Took them nearly 5 years to release a driver, and it's still a Beta!

      Of course, Vista64 users are in the same boat, so I don't understand why people think XP64 is special in this regard.

      But I digress...

    26. Re:World domination 201 by AlexMax2742 · · Score: 1

      Who said that you had to upgrade your current machine to Vista? There is no reason to.

      There's also no reason not to put Vista on a new machine unless you're putting less than 2 gigs of RAM on it for some godawful reason.

      --
      I'm the guy with the unpopular opinion
    27. Re:World domination 201 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've been using WinXP X64 for awhile now we no real problems. The only issue I have ever had is with installing iTunes, which after some tweaking installed just fine.

    28. Re:World domination 201 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you actually tried XP_64 recently? I've been running it for six months and as long as you don't need to execute any 16 bit code it works just as well as 32 bit XP. The only exception is programs that check your Windows version and don't see XP_64 as NT, but that's a failure on the part of the software author. Even this is very rare; all of my important software and games run flawlessly.

    29. Re:World domination 201 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All devs (me included) where i work are using XP64 and it works very well (just as well as 32bit XP). Reason for the switch was support for more RAM. I have marked memory hungry 32bit apps with editbin /LARGEADDRESSAWARE, giving the apps 4GB virtual memory:-)

      Note that XP64 is a fork of 64bit Server 2003 so its not really XP.

    30. Re:World domination 201 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      XP may be able to do 64-bit just fine, but when I was running XP 64-bit I ran into so many driver issues that I just gave up. There are a surprising number of devices that don't have (and likely will never have) XP 64-bit capable drivers.

    31. Re:World domination 201 by Allador · · Score: 1

      Vista is hated. Weather it is a technical failure or a PR failure is moot. No one wants it. And XP64 is not really functional at all.

      LOL thats whats called hand-waving to distract from any facts.

      Out of the tiny percentage of the world's population who has any emotional opinion about operating systems, or even knows what an operating system is, some minority population subset hates vista.

      XP64 has been in use by engineering shops for many years, quite successfully. The situations (long before Vista) where they needed/wanted to be on windows, but 4GB wasnt enough memory.

      Just because you havent seen it doesnt mean it hasnt been done quite broadly and successfully.

      Same for Vista, the x64 version is quite nice and solid. Light years ahead of XP in performance (at the higher end of hardware, where you need 4+ processors and 8+ GB of memory) and reliability.

    32. Re:World domination 201 by Allador · · Score: 1

      Your usage patterns may indicate that x64 versions of desktop isnt useful for you, but to generalize your personal experience to the entire world and say no one has any reason to use it is absurd.

      Pretty much any modern developer in certain environments can use it. For example, for some of the development work I do, I'm running Oracle Enterprise DB, Tomcat w/ 3 apps running, and Eclipse. Oracle and Eclipse both get allocated 1GB of memory on startup, tomcat gets 1.5gb.

      Just right there if you're also running firefox and other apps, you're well over 4GB of memory. So you want a 6GB or 8GB box, which you cant do on x86 Vista or XP.

      And thats not even including engineering folks who can easily use >= 8GB of memory on their desktops.

      It's not mainstream, but there are many many legitimate uses of x64 on the desktop.

      In addition, if you're using Vista, and you dont have any specialty software that wont run on x64, then you probably should consider using it. This is because of the driver quality.

      Many 32-bit vista machines (especially in the consumer hardware space) ship with drivers that are minimally functional patches of old xp-era drivers. In other words, they're terrible. Buggy, crash-prone, leaky.

      However, x64 drivers are much more likely to have been written from scratch or been given more attention.

      The net result is that the hardware and drivers on Vista x64 tend to be much higher quality on average.

      Lastly, there's no reason NOT to run x64 on your desktops and laptops. All equipment you buy nowadays (ie, cpus) are x64 enabled. So its not like running a 10% utilization x64 desktop is any more wasteful than a 10% utilization x86 desktop. It's exactly as wasteful in both cases.

    33. Re:World domination 201 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "No one wants it" is a very general statement in which I don't believe you fully represent everyone. XP64 works just fine and has been working fine for a couple years. I've been using Vista 64bit on 3 machines with varying internals without issue. Out of 3 machines there was only 1 problem. Unfortunately Linksys refused to write any newer drivers for my $100 + WMP54GX Wireless Card. This can't be blamed on Microsoft, but just poor Linksys support. Vista is far more secure than even XP SP3 and takes better advantage of modern hardware and software. The biggest problem is the all the so called "experts" that jump on the Vista hating band-wagon. In my field of work I talk to general computer users daily and find that many people talk bad about Vista primarily because of previous things they heard in the news when it was released. People are just repeating everything they hear in the belief it's all true and it gets annoying. Linux is becoming more of a contender, but only for power users and experts. The average user has difficulty with the learning curve of linux. Possibly because they've gotten used to how easy windows can be to operate or because it actually takes effort install programs and perform simple tasks. My only 2 complaints of Vista are simple. UAC is overly aggressive. This is easily fixed by shutting it off. Second is that Vista never released with WinFS and several other key components that were promised early on. I was an early adopter and ran into very few problems compared to years ago with the many Whistler betas I tested. The biggest downfall with Windows of all time is viruses/malware. The average user installs lots of bloated protection software which in many cases i've seen ends up making Vista buggy with it's poorly written code (Norton, McAfee, CA, and many others). And to houstonbofh, correct spelling definitely helps your credibility. (Weather, Loose)

    34. Re:World domination 201 by datapharmer · · Score: 1

      I ran into this problem at first to, and while I will blame Microsoft for many things, can't really blame them for not supporting closed hardware that manufacturers won't provide drivers for... strangely enough, many devices now have 64 bit XP drivers thanks to Vista's requirement of having both 32-bit and 64-bit available for certification. Many manufacturers released an XP version too since they had already done the 64-bit port.

      --
      Get a web developer
  3. why aRe:They're glowing! by irtza · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There are no new features in this build. If Microsoft has any new stuff lined up for the RTM then we're going to have to wait to find out.

    All this talk about stable beta's seems a bit pointless. If you change the name and theme on the product, you can't real muck it up too bad. What's the point of this other than to try to put the name "Vista" in the grave?

    Anyone know what these people are so excited about? Couldn't get much real info from the article. They comment that its snappier than other betas. How about compared to XP? That would be the real comparison I would like to see.

    I am a linux person myself - Ubuntu on the computer I am posting from, but I did use Windows on my laptop before wiping it. I am also not opposed to having windows installed if I gain any benefit. That is what I want to hear from people, what are its compelling features (I don't play games).

    --
    When all else fails, try.
    1. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by gbarules2999 · · Score: 5, Funny

      All I learned from their screenshots is that it looks like KDE and that there's a picture of a fish in the wallpaper. Wow. Revelation of the day.

    2. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It's slow as hell. as one of those that have ran it, I'll tell you right now. the speedy feel of the XP days will never EVER come back, until your computer has way more processing speed and data channel speeds that exceed what the newer Microsoft OS's will use.

      I have Vista and Windows 7 running nicely. sata 15,000 rpm drives and hardware that is fricking insane fast makes it feel like XP on modern hardware.

      posting anon to avoid being kicked by the MSFT NDA

    3. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by irtza · · Score: 4, Interesting

      so here is then the next question, are the added features of Vista/win 7 worth it? What do you have available that you did not previously and does this make life more efficient?

      --
      When all else fails, try.
    4. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by capnkr · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'd guess that 'black hats' are glowing because this gives them a good jump on:

      1) finding out which security holes still exist from prior MS work, and

      2) a good look at the "new" OS structure to find out what other holes might be there, well before final release...

      --
      "...there are some things that can beat smartness and foresight. Awkwardness and stupidity can." ~ Mark Twain
    5. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by houstonbofh · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's slow as hell. as one of those that have ran it, I'll tell you right now. the speedy feel of the XP days will never EVER come back, until your computer has way more processing speed and data channel speeds that exceed what the newer Microsoft OS's will use.

      Not true... It just won't come from Microsoft. Linux, Solaris, *BSD, and Apple all have that snappy feel. Maybe Microsoft should look at the code in Linux. It is open... ;)

    6. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by aliquis · · Score: 1

      All this talk about stable beta's seems a bit pointless. If you change the name and theme on the product, you can't real muck it up too bad. What's the point of this other than to try to put the name "Vista" in the grave?

      To release the final Windows Vista as it was supposed to be?

    7. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 3, Informative

      I'll tell you right now. the speedy feel of the XP days will never EVER come back

      They never left. I use Vista, and it's as snappy as XP ever was.

      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
    8. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      Meh. If you don't play games, why use windows? I use it myself for games and the occasional access/excel nightmare that some accounting wonder-weenie came up with, that I have to "fix." I tack the occasional license costs onto my taxes as a business expense, and call it a day.

      If you don't need any of that stuff, why bother to post, other than to show off the fact that you're a Ubuntu user. (Thank god I don't use a trendy distro.)

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    9. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by pyrbrand · · Score: 1

      If you read the rest of the sentence, they're referring to no new features since the M3 builds and the pre-beta from PDC. Also, that's based on the guy's limited playing around with the build. If you want to see the full review with a list-out of new features you can see it here: http://blogs.zdnet.com/hardware/?p=3223

    10. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by johny42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      XP was the same. I tried it once when it came out, and it took like 10 minutes to completely boot on my 300 MHz processor (which I believe was pretty standard back then). My thoughts were exactly the same as the stuff everyone is saying about Vista now. I wonder if in 5 years everyone will be saying how Vista is speedy and some new Windows version needs unreasonable hardware...

      I stuck with Windows 2000 at the time and migrated to Linux later, but whenever I needed to set up a Windows computer for someone, I used 2000, because I never could shake the feeling that XP is bloated, just like everyone feels about Vista.

      So what exactly is it that makes XP OK (in comparison with previous versions, like 2000) and Vista too bloated (in comparison with previous versions, like XP)?

    11. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by yoyhed · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The best new feature of Vista, and it really, really is a nice one, is the instant Start Menu search. You can be SO fast at starting programs or finding files by just hitting the Windows key and typing the first few letters. Also, breadcrumb navigation in Windows Explorer is nice. However, these are things that can be added to XP - I just wish the authors of such addons would refrain from making them look exactly like Vista, because that doesn't look good with my XP classic theme.

      --
      WHO NEEDS SHIFT WHEN YOU HAVE CAPSLOCK/ DAMN1
    12. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by yoyhed · · Score: 2, Funny

      So what exactly is it that makes XP OK (in comparison with previous versions, like 2000) and Vista too bloated (in comparison with previous versions, like XP)?

      The fact that modern hardware eats XP for breakfast, and shits out Windows 3.1.

      --
      WHO NEEDS SHIFT WHEN YOU HAVE CAPSLOCK/ DAMN1
    13. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by guerilla7 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Yep same here, nothing new on Windows 7 that Ubuntu can offer, or OS X, imho. I wonder what pen testers are doing nowadays with their copies of this beta 7000 release?

    14. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Z34107 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I wonder what you broke, then. My friend has it running on a Macbook Pro (which I can guarantee you doesn't have a 15,000 rpm drive!) and it's pretty damn snappy.

      --
      DATABASE WOW WOW
    15. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by ball-lightning · · Score: 1

      I haven't tried the latest 7000 build, but I did run build 6801 in a vmware instance and I was impressed.

      While I actually like (and prefer) Vista, I can not deny that it is much slower than XP and GNU/Linux. From what I've seen firsthand, you can not say the same of Windows 7.

    16. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by NekoXP · · Score: 1, Troll

      Funny, the comparison that Windows looks a lot like KDE is kind of backwards.

      Vista came about long before KDE got it's pretty revamp.. and Windows 7 just looks a hell of a lot like Vista.

    17. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you do not play games - you do not need Windows. CentOS will fulfill all your needs... If I could get keyboard and mouse attached to PS3 - I wouldn't use Windows myself...

    18. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by IllForgetMyNickSoonA · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Heard that swooooshing sound? Ever wandered what it was? :-)

    19. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good Lord -- their screenshots are like all the gripping fun of reinstalling the OS without all that pesky sense of accomplishments of actually doing so.

    20. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by clang_jangle · · Score: 1
      Linux, Solaris, *BSD, and Apple all have that snappy feel.

      I use OS X daily; it has many virues, but "snappy feel" sure ain't one of them. It's been a couple of years since I last used Solaris, but it also was not exactly renowned for its snappy feel.
      Of course, perhaps it's just that all things are relative -- snappy to me is ion3 or windowmaker on Linux or FBSD... Most everything else feels pretty leisurely at best.

      --
      Caveat Utilitor
    21. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > starting programs or finding files by just hitting the Windows key and typing the first few letters

      A KDE4 menu feature does the same keyboard search. It is indeed a nice feature.

    22. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by socsoc · · Score: 4, Funny

      I use OS X daily; it has many virues

      Would that be virtues or viruses?

    23. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by clang_jangle · · Score: 1

      Got context? Type oh's hapin... :)

      --
      Caveat Utilitor
    24. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      :) Just pullin your chain

    25. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by yoyhed · · Score: 1

      Nice to know - I haven't used KDE since v3-something.

      --
      WHO NEEDS SHIFT WHEN YOU HAVE CAPSLOCK/ DAMN1
    26. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by JackieBrown · · Score: 3, Interesting

      KDE 4 has had that since the 4.0 betas

    27. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can be SO fast at starting programs or finding files by just hitting the Windows key and typing the first few letters.

      So in other words, it's almost as easy to use as WindowMaker has been for the last ten years.

    28. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Windows 7 also has the snappy feel, as one of the person who've tried it. Either the OP has a bad computer, or bad drivers. Windows 7 is way snappier than Vista and approaches XP greatly.

      Of course, I realize you don't care because you're a fanboy, but I had to post it anyway.

    29. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Archangel_Azazel · · Score: 1

      Because hardly anyone besides the fanbois run Macs?

      They're great for a lot of things, but they simply don't have the user share WINX does.

      And see my above rants for my opinion on MSFT being "on track".

      A.A.M

      --
      Your mind is like a parachute. It works best when it's been opened.
    30. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      one Virus, severel Vira

    31. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by timmarhy · · Score: 1

      oh please you people bitched and moaned about how sluggish XP was when it came out, and win98 and win95. you just like to bitch about the big bad faceless corporation. if you want sluggish lets talk about KDE...

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    32. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Taveta · · Score: 1

      Why can't I just have DOS back? Stable, fast, and flexible enough for most of us simple folk.

      --
      If there was a tax on stupidity, there would be no national debt.
    33. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so exactly what freeware programs like Launchy do?

    34. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you want to nitpick, at least do it right: it's "virii". Second declension noun, if I remember correctly.

    35. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by dark+whole · · Score: 1

      KDE got the thick taskbar before windows though. I think that is the 'looks like kde' trait he meant.

      --
      CORPORATION, n. An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility.
    36. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by BungaDunga · · Score: 4, Informative

      Try Launchy. Does that and more, I hardly touch my start menu. Runs on XP for that matter.

    37. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The best new feature of Vista is useful voice recognition.

    38. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does this mean I will have to buy another new printer and more RAM?

    39. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's still beta - they haven't yet said "this is the most secure OS we've ever made", which is the sign that MS considers an OS ready for the normal extended testing by the consumer.

    40. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Sinbios · · Score: 1

      Huh? Your NDA prevents you from telling people about how well software everyone else has access to runs on your hardware?

      --
      Anyone can "stand up for what they believe", but it takes a very brave individual to change what they believe. - Loundry
    41. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by jonbryce · · Score: 1

      The only new feature in Vista that is any use is UAC, a badly implemented copy of sudo which other operating systems have had for years.

      It makes life less efficient, but in the interests of security which is of course important.

    42. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows looks like KDE? I think you've got that reversed there, son. KDE 4 apes Vista. Badly.

    43. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by moniker127 · · Score: 1

      Directx 11 (cpu graphics acceleration)

      much quicker boot<br>
      lower mem useage<br>
      super bar<br>
      updated accessories<br>
      ie8 really isnt terrible<br>
      feels good (most important thing)<br>
      <br><br>
      No, it is not ubuntu, and yes, it is still slower. But its still windows. It still runs all the friggin software windows does, and it isnt a painful experience, infact, id say that theres more skulldrudgery involved in ubuntu.

    44. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by nschubach · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So far this is the only option people have brought up when they talk about Vista. If this was the only thing that makes Vista better than XP... is it REALLY worth it? If so, why not add that to the classic start menu? I mean, if you add the Desktop Search to XP you get the same basic functionality from what I understand. What else makes Vista "worth it"? From everything I've noticed working with it and trying to get it to connect to an XP Home printer share (unsuccessfully I might add) it's utter crap. All the options are so buried that it's not funny (and quite ironically forcing you to use above said feature in order to be able to use the PC efficiently)

      So if I understand this, the reason Vista is so good is because they hid everything from you and make you run everything with the keyboard. You may as well run DOS, Unix or Linux if you like typing the commands you need to run so much.

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    45. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by vikstar · · Score: 1

      What's the point of this other than to try to put the name "Vista" in the grave?

      Ubuntu on the computer I am posting from, but I did use Windows on my laptop before wiping it

      Did you actually use Vista, or are you one of the many individuals that rats on it due to third-hand accounts, unfairly perpetuating and overinflating Vista's bad name?

      --
      The question of whether a computer can think is no more interesting than the question of whether a submarine can swim.
    46. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Alex+Belits · · Score: 4, Insightful

      UAC is far worse than sudo -- with sudo you have one point when application is started as root, and the only thing user has to say is to confirm that he actually wants to run something as administrator. Applications that run as root are still trusted to actually so the right thing because user isn't supposed to know what precisely a particular application should or shouldn't be allowed to do. When anything fine-grained is necessary, there is PolicyKit that controls access to services -- then user's input is only necessary if policy demands it.

      UAC is all about not trusting the application or system configuration -- user is asked to make all the decisions. It's like bizarro PolicyKit -- fine-grained access control, but no actual policy behind it, so user has to make all decisions. The root of this problem is, of course, Windows' still-shitty IPC and per-process privileges/permissions handling -- until that is fixed, expect more braindamaged security from them.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    47. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by mweather · · Score: 1

      Long before? Try 6 months. That's not long enough to copy from scratch.

    48. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by zmollusc · · Score: 1

      Hehe, a DOS that could handle modern hardware and running from ramdisk would be quite a laugh. Ooh, duke3d would run sweet :-)

      --
      They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
    49. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by mweather · · Score: 1

      So it's faster than keyboard/mouse, or do you have a different definition of useful (i.e. are you parapalegic)?

    50. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this seems to me to the standard operating producedure in the windows world. If something is slow its the computer's fault or the owners fault just because for a few others it works just fine, or at least their definition of fine. With the exception of certain hardware *cough*, ATI, *cough* I rarely see this type of discrepancy in my trials and tribulations using Ubuntu and SuSe.

    51. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      Question: do you run XP/2000/whatever with full Admin privileges? If/when you use Linux, do you log in as root?

      If you answered yes to the second of those... I don't know what to say. If you answered yes to the first and no to the second, well, why do you? Running with full permissions on the most commonly targeted OS doesn't sound too smart to me. Of course, running as a non-Admin on XP/2000 can be a REAL bitch (yes, I've done it).

      Enter UAC. From the standpoint of somebody who used to run XP as a limited user, UAC is a real blessing. I can live with a couple prompts a week if it means I can
      A) run everything else with limited permissions
      B) elevate those things that need it without using the PoS that is Runas

      In Win7, they even changed the default behavior of UAC so it elevates MS-signed binaries by default. Personally I'm not sure I like this default, but it certainly results in fewer prompts.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    52. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by ClubStew · · Score: 1

      An instrumented pre-release that hasn't gone through major performance improvements is slower than the release of XP? Wow, what a revelation. Pre-release of XP wasn't all that fast, either.

    53. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by gbarules2999 · · Score: 0

      I was talking more about KDE 3.5. That predates Vista plenty.

    54. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by DigitalisAkujin · · Score: 1

      I have that speedy feel NOW on Vista x64 lol

    55. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by scoot80 · · Score: 1

      In my opinion, Vista is more stable than XP. I haven't had any blue screens of death with Vista. I agree, before SP1 it had some issues, but since SP1, I haven't had any issues. The laptop I'm using it on is fast enough to run it(2.2Ghz Dual Core), plenty of RAM (4Gig - RAM is cheap these days), no issues. I wouldn't go back to XP. But, thats my experience.

    56. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux has a snappy feel? Maybe in the console. Depending on what you are running, it can be just as much of a dog as Windows and Mac OS. Its just in your head. Its called the *nix complex. Kinda like the short guy complex. You can get counceling for that I think. You should look into it. :)

    57. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Drgnkght · · Score: 1

      IE with elevated privileges by default. What a wonderful idea.

    58. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "All this talk about stable beta's seems a bit pointless. If you change the name and theme on the product, you can't real muck it up too bad"

      Ooook.

      "I am a linux person myself - Ubuntu on the computer I am posting from,"

      Now that's funny. Ubuntu guys manage to fuck up everything that was working just two weeks after a release.

    59. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by ozmanjusri · · Score: 1
      Anyone know what these people are so excited about? Couldn't get much real info from the article. They comment that its snappier than other betas. How about compared to XP? That would be the real comparison I would like to see.

      Not much, by the looks of it.

      XTReview has Beta 6956 (which performs like Vista) vs Beta 7000.0 (Beta 1) vs Windows XP Sp3.

      Bottom line is that the new Beta is marginally better than Vista in most benchmarks, but slower than XP SP3. Both are much slower in HDD write performance.

      --
      "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
    60. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by blake1 · · Score: 1
      http://lmgtfy.com/?q=windows+xp+vs+windows+7

      Follow the first link. There we go, that wasn't so hard.

    61. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you want to nitpick, at least do it right: it's "virii". Second declension noun, if I remember correctly.

      Not even close.

    62. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by yoyhed · · Score: 1

      Well no, they don't make you run anything from the keyboard - but at least for me, using the keyboard is a lot faster than the mouse. I also never said it was worth it to "upgrade" just for these features, I was just answering someone's question about what good new features there were. You are right about some options, like for example, Network Connections - you have to start Network and Sharing Center, then click Show Network Connections on the left.

      --
      WHO NEEDS SHIFT WHEN YOU HAVE CAPSLOCK/ DAMN1
    63. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by yoyhed · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm not implying that Vista had this feature before anything else, but do note that the KDE 4 alphas and betas didn't even start coming out until 6 months after Vista was released.

      --
      WHO NEEDS SHIFT WHEN YOU HAVE CAPSLOCK/ DAMN1
    64. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      The best new feature of Vista, and it really, really is a nice one, is the instant Start Menu search. You can be SO fast at starting programs or finding files by just hitting the Windows key and typing the first few letters.

      The trouble is, the only reason it needs speeding up a lot is because MS slowed down the Start Menu a lot by totally fucking in up in Vista.

    65. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by yoyhed · · Score: 1

      I tried it - it's pretty nice, but by default it doesn't search outside the Start Menu for non-.lnk programs. Vista will search system directories and find stuff like regedit and msconfig, and will also search the control panel, so you can type "mou" and see the Mouse control panel as the first option. My biggest beef with it though: it's not also a command line. It's nice to just hit the Windows key and quickly fire off a command in Vista. That having been said, I'm still using XP.

      --
      WHO NEEDS SHIFT WHEN YOU HAVE CAPSLOCK/ DAMN1
    66. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you answered yes to the second of those... I don't know what to say.

      Depends on the machine and what I'm going to do on it.

      My ASUS router runs Linux, and I have to log in as root. My "home server" is in the middle of being built and configured, so I often log in as or su into as root (instead of typing sudo again and again).

    67. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by irtza · · Score: 1

      If I hadn't commented - I would mod you informative. I do run everything as a user on both systems and only log in as admin to install applications/do maintenance work. I can see why UAC would be useful - I personally couldn't stand Vista long enough to keep it and learn it(my laptop that came with it ran way way too slow - I even had to turn off the indexing for search in ubuntu).

      --
      When all else fails, try.
    68. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by yoyhed · · Score: 1

      I disagree - I think the only thing that compared to this kind of efficiency before (at least in a stock Windows installation) was XP and pinned start menu programs - you could hit Windows key and then 'I' to start the Internet link, for example. However, having every program in your Start Menu and every hidden program and control panel icon also pinned would not work.

      --
      WHO NEEDS SHIFT WHEN YOU HAVE CAPSLOCK/ DAMN1
    69. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by PixetaledPikachu · · Score: 1

      So what exactly is it that makes XP OK (in comparison with previous versions, like 2000) and Vista too bloated (in comparison with previous versions, like XP)?

      XP and 2K adds substantial improvement over previous Windows iteration. Once my hardware can handle XP, not once I've ever think to move back to W2K. Maybe Vista also bring lot of new and cool stuff to us. But I failed to recognize any of them.

    70. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by yoyhed · · Score: 1

      Acknowledged. I think it's a good thing to be able to play my games and use Apple features at the same time - it's the closest I can come to using OS X for my everyday use.

      --
      WHO NEEDS SHIFT WHEN YOU HAVE CAPSLOCK/ DAMN1
    71. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      There were screenshots of vista out long before RTM

      --
      This space for rent.
    72. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by jackal40 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Unfortunately, the design of XP/2000 required admin privileges to install most programs - then, because of the coding decisions made by Microsoft, many of these same programs required admin privileges to run. Add in Windows popularity and the sheer number of programs that run this way and you have created the wonderful target of hackers, etc. I kind of miss the old dos days of popping in a floppy with the OS and program I wanted to run and rebooting the computer. Totally unfeasible now for most users, but I liked being able to customize the OS for that application. Imagine having to reboot today when changing programs, it would be a nightmare!

      --
      The patriot volunteer, fighting for country and his rights, makes the most reliable soldier on earth. (Stonewall Jackson
    73. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by BungaDunga · · Score: 2, Informative

      Check under options->plugins->runner, there's a keyword cmd which invokes (what else?) cmd.exe with the command you give it. I added my system32 directory to the catalog (+.bat, .exe, .com file types). If you want to see the control panel too, open the control panel up and also open C:\Program Files\Launchy\Utilities\Special Folders\ . Drag all of the control panel icons into it. Boom, shortcuts that are invokable from Launchy.

      There's also Executor too.

    74. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and when i can't install hardware the standard response in the linux world is that i need to code the driver myself or it is the manufacturers fault for not open sourcing their drivers.

    75. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1

      Meh. If you don't play games, why use windows?

      I develop applications for my Windows-using employer. And before you suggest "get them to switch to Linux", let me add that my employer is ginormous school district and not only do all their machines run only Windows, but they require us to stay with Internet Explorer 6 because the awful web-based application we use for everything* won't run under IE7! Mine is an extreme example, but I think it reflects a common reality. Most of my machines run Linux, but I still have to have that Windows machine for development.

      * They were sold a $50 million custom bandwidth-hogging crash-prone shitty-interfaced web-based system called Maximo which the salesmen promised would bring order and accountability to the Maintenance and Operations division. We like to joke that Maximo has indeed revealed a chunk of wasted productivity amounting to 30% of our man-hours--- and that 30% is the time spent dealing with the delays, inefficiencies, and idiocies of Maximo. This place is nothing BUT pointy-haired bosses.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    76. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      What?!?!?!
      As much as I remember KDE, it has been just evolving. While Vista is definitely not an evolutionary step in Windows design.
      So, yeah, Vista and Windows 7 look like KDE has always looked. Just see how 3.3 looks(circa 2004), not much has changed at first look.

    77. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by JamesTRexx · · Score: 1

      Got a new laptop (XXODD (Clevo) 570 series) recently and the way I use XP on it (dual boot with Ubuntu for now) is by stripping it first with nlite, then install it.
      If it wasn't for some minor improvements like wireless I'd still use 2000 for the games. In fact, I've set XP to look like 2000 because I don't like the native XP look (nor the native Vista look).

      --
      home
    78. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Juln · · Score: 1

      But, it CAN offer mysterious configuration changes, daily explorer crashes and frustration at the illogical design! Don't forget that.

      --
      Juln
    79. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Juln · · Score: 2, Informative

      I gave Vista a fair chance, honestly. It is adequate, but pretty lousy given the resources MS had to make it not suck... and it sucks. They've gone nowhere in the past 8 years.

      --
      Juln
    80. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think it is approaching xp in alot of ways, but it is still a great step beyond 2k8 and vista. Im sure as time goes on, there will be tweaks and modifications we can make to improve function. To this day, I still adjust the delay for menu's in xp to improve UI speed.

      *disclaimer: post made from a system running 7 with google chrome*

    81. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by furry_wookie · · Score: 1

      >You can be SO fast at starting programs or finding files
      >by just hitting the Windows key and typing the first few letters.

      Congratulations.... Windows just got a half baked copy of yet something else that has been on MacOS for a long time. Now make it work in browser bars, open websites, do math, work in any dialog box in the system etc.. and you can call it equal to what MacOS has had for years.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quicksilver_(software)

      --
      -- Given enough time and money, Microsoft will eventualy invent UNIX.
    82. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The first few letters of 'Microsoft Office Excel 2007' vs the first few of 'Microsoft Office Word 2007'?

      Sounds convenient.

    83. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Mista2 · · Score: 1

      I just use RocketDock and avoid the startmenu for all my day to day applications. only going there for something I use one in a blue moon.

    84. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No doubt with all the "load" of a KDE Desktop as well.

      "Its Vista with a lot more colorful lights"! and we'll have to deal with *all* the problems we had with Vista and compatibility.

      All hype is what it is.

      I cant help but also think, is MS just trying to out sell the Linux and UNIX OS's with all this. Or some other reason maybe? since they don't care about the users of Windows, most of them have the sense to stick with XP and avoid the "hype".

    85. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by yoyhed · · Score: 1

      That's why there's the ability to type any part of it - start typing e, x, c or w, o, r.. - there's also arrow keys for picking something down the list.

      --
      WHO NEEDS SHIFT WHEN YOU HAVE CAPSLOCK/ DAMN1
    86. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by yoyhed · · Score: 1

      Well you don't have to condescendingly congratulate me, someone asked what was nice in Vista and I answered - I love OS X, it's intuitive and innovative, but it doesn't run my games.

      I'd dual-boot but a) that's a pain in the ass, and b) I'm not spending that kind of money to get Apple hardware that's as powerful as what I have right here. If Hackintoshes were as seamless an experience as an actual Mac, I'd be down for that - I haven't checked up on how well they work nowadays.

      I especially appreciate the features being in Vista because I do computer repair. I can spend tons of time pimping out my own installations to be just right, but having to use other people's computers a lot, it's nice to have those basic efficiency features there.

      --
      WHO NEEDS SHIFT WHEN YOU HAVE CAPSLOCK/ DAMN1
    87. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by yoyhed · · Score: 1

      Thanks, I hadn't looked really closely but that all works like a charm!

      --
      WHO NEEDS SHIFT WHEN YOU HAVE CAPSLOCK/ DAMN1
    88. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by EvanED · · Score: 1

      UAC is far worse than sudo -- with sudo you have one point when application is started as root, and the only thing user has to say is to confirm that he actually wants to run something as administrator.

      So, um, how does UAC differ? Near as I can tell, you've largely just described it too. I haven't received multiple UAC prompts for a single process, so it's not like it's giving you UAC prompts for different kinds of operations; my impression is that when you accept the prompt it changes the user it's running under so that it's root. What this means is that, on this axis, I would say it's actually rather more convenient than sudo, because you don't have to restart the program to give it root permissions. There's none of the "crap, I needed to run this with sudo" that you get when working from the Linux command line. (Things like the KDE sudo wrapper don't have that problem either.)

      Sudo is better designed, but I think UAC takes way more flack than it deserves. I posted some other differences a while ago.

    89. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by EvanED · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, the design of XP/2000 required admin privileges to install most programs...

      Of course, if you're intending to compare to the Linux situation, it's basically the same. I know of one package manager that is designed to run as non-root, and that's the one in GoboLinux. Yum? Apt? Emerge? All require root to install, or at least did a year ago when I spent some time looking for a package manager I could use on a system without root.

      This basically means that you either need to go through the wonders of manual dependency tracking (considering the existence of the term "DLL hell" it's amazing that doesn't have a more derogatory name) or you're in the same situation.

    90. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by EvanED · · Score: 1

      If you want to nitpick, at least do it right: it's "virii".

      Maybe you should instead.

    91. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      That's the most accurate description of Vista I think I've read yet.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    92. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by theantipop · · Score: 1

      Ok, but isn't this the point of a beta? As long as there are some people with good intentions doing the same thing, that is.

    93. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by ArtemaOne · · Score: 1

      I have Vista Business on 3 computers (legit). What is UAC? I remember something when I first install that I turn off with that acronym I think.

    94. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Buscador · · Score: 1

      The highly optimized XP Pro on my ThinkPad was the snappiest feeling OS I had ever tried until recently. Using nLite to only install what was relevant, turning off a lot of services that I did not need, and partitioning the HD to ensure that the OS was installed on the outer 20GB of the disk took me about a week of work, but resulted in a very fast and stable system. It even outperformed Ubuntu 7.10 and 8.4, although they were "stock" installs. (I have not tried 8.10 yet.) If I had compiled them for my laptop and otherwise spent the same amount of time I spent with XP, that might have changed. I hate Vista, but had been reading good things about the performance and stability of Windows Server 2008 when converted to a workstation, so I gave it a try. I downloaded an evaluation copy and installed it on the only free space on my drive, which is the slowest inner 25GB. After following all the instructions available on the Internet, I had an OS that outperformed my XP Pro installation on everything except startup time--even with Aero fully enabled. All of my applications ran fine on the 64 bit version, except for a couple of drivers--Bluetooth drivers required minor modification and the Bluetoth PAN did not work at all, and no drivers for my Globetrotter 3G card would work. I switched to the x86 build, and after making similar mods to the BT drivers, everything works great. It even supports my full 4GB of RAM. With a lot of copying back and forth to an external drive using dd, I managed to move my OS to right after the XP partition. I am still triple booting a couple months later in case I run into problems with a seldom-used critical app, but have not booted into XP in weeks. It is truly what Vista should have been--and could have, since it shares the core with Vista SP 1. However, I won't pay $500 for it. If you don't have or know someone with an MSDN subscription and are not a college student who has access to the DreamSpark program, it is probably not a viable option.

    95. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by kv9 · · Score: 1

      The best new feature of Vista, and it really, really is a nice one, is the instant Start Menu search. You can be SO fast at starting programs or finding files by just hitting the Windows key and typing the first few letters.

      I thought Windows people had a lot of praise for its "amazing" GUI capabilities. now you're getting hardons about the command line?

    96. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by kv9 · · Score: 1

      I haven't had any blue screens of death with Vista.

      were they red instead?

    97. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Daengbo · · Score: 1

      There is the new quick launcher and taskbar combination which shows clickable previews of windows. That's new and was a big topic of conversation a few weeks ago when it could be unlocked in one of the builds.

      http://techreport.com/discussions.x/15827

    98. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by kv9 · · Score: 1

      They never left. I use Vista, and it's as snappy as XP ever was.

      as snappy as XP on a 486

    99. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by yoyhed · · Score: 1

      I'm not a "Windows person" - I'm just able to recognize a nice feature in Vista that wasn't in XP. I also never said Windows had an amazingly capable GUI.

      I've always been a keyboard guy - it's much faster to hammer out a few keystrokes than put your hand on the mouse and make precise movements.

      Only on Slashdot do I get 10+ mostly hostile replies to a comment where I was just answering someone's question - what's better about Vista than XP?

      Besides, the only command line that gives me a hardon is a Linux bash shell.

      --
      WHO NEEDS SHIFT WHEN YOU HAVE CAPSLOCK/ DAMN1
    100. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I tried Launchy. Half of the time it worked. The other half of the time, it either didn't find the program or just didn't activate at all when I pressed the hotkeys (granted I was using Vista, which could have been the problem). Not that I'm defending Vista's built-in search mechanism either. That is also extremely slow. Searching for something in the start menu often takes longer than finding it manually. And searching for a file takes 10 times as long as it used to in XP (open folder, enter search term, Search Tools -> Search Pane, Advanced Search, Include Non-Indexed Files, wait forever) unless you have it set to index your entire hard drive, which constantly eats clock cycles and wastes disk space. The default parameters are set to index all the places where I never store anything. A search of the hard drive via explorer takes 150 - 200% longer than thru the command prompt, which I still use almost 15 years since Microsoft "phased out" the command line.

    101. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Alex+Belits · · Score: 2, Informative

      UAC prompt appears when something requests a privileged operation. It's left to the user to determine if it's supposed to be valid or not, and user usually has no idea how to determine that.

      sudo/gksudo prompt appears when one application/script intends to run another one as root. It does not wait for any particular "privileged" action, so user only has to check if executable name matches. He also can configure sudoers file to not ask him for password for some or all applications. The only problem is, currently sudo is often configured to cover way too much (often everything) for the user created by default, so prompt is not shown if another application is started within the timeout, however this is the problem with configuration.

      PolicyKit usually doesn't ask the user at all because permissions are in its configuration.

      What this means is that, on this axis, I would say it's actually rather more convenient than sudo, because you don't have to restart the program to give it root permissions. There's none of the "crap, I needed to run this with sudo" that you get when working from the Linux command line.

      In Unix-like systems you never run administrative utilities as a non-root user. The only three things you may want to run as both root and regular user are:

      1. network analyzer
      2. shell
      3. text editor

      All three should better be difficult to start in privileged mode because of serious security implications of what they can do.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    102. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Daengbo · · Score: 1

      Want snappy Linux? Run Slitaz on a box with more than 256MB RAM and it runs all in memory automatically. Instantaneous in just about every way.

    103. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

      Really? I learned that Windows needs to be rebooted twice - still! Way to go Microsoft - billions spent in developing software and they still can't get the installer right.

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    104. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by richlv · · Score: 1

      start menu search sounds like something kde3 suse menu has had for quite some time. then they moved to kickoff (10.2, i think ?), which searches even more data.

      breadcrumb navigation has been available in gtk dialogs for quite some time now, though i personally don't like the inability to select opened path as text and copy or modify it directly.

      i'll admit, i haven't tried kde4 for some time, so maybe it has something new to offer.
      sounds like tag 'kde' is not without a reason :)

      --
      Rich
    105. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by vegiVamp · · Score: 1

      wot, gnome-do? ( http://do.davebsd.com/ )

      --
      What a depressingly stupid machine.
    106. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by McFadden · · Score: 2, Informative

      Mac OS X also has it with spotlight. Finds any app, file, web page or just about anything. I use it all the time to keep my dock icons down to a manageable number.

      The question I'm interested in through, is not why Microsoft are late to the party, but whether this search facility works without grinding the disk constantly 24/7 to build its index like Vista does. I'm not familar with the KDE version, but I doubt it has this problem, and I know for a fact that Mac OS X doesn't do it either.

    107. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "UAC is all about not trusting the application or system configuration -- user is asked to make all the decisions."

      " with sudo you have one point when application is started as root, and the only thing user has to say is to confirm that he actually wants to run something as administrator"

      So he doesn't have to make the decision then as well?

      Oh, right. I get it. It's from Microsoft. It's gotta be bad.

      My god, I had forgotten what Slashdot was like!

    108. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by scoot80 · · Score: 1

      No, they weren't. Funny that. If I do get any, I'll be sure to report the color. Though, it makes me wonder what kinda crappy hardware people run it on in order to get problems they get. People are happy to get new operating systems yet they aren't prepared to upgrade their hardware. (yet, in some cases getting software licences is more expensive than the entire computer itself).

    109. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by umeboshi · · Score: 1

      Your post reminds me of this:

      www.kde-look.org/content/show.php/show.php?content=78924

      Not much glowing in this wallpaper, however.

    110. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by skiman1979 · · Score: 1

      Yeah I can't stand UAC on Vista. I will probably end up disabling it on our laptops. I recently tried adding a couple new Vista laptops to our domain at work and went through the standard UAC handshake of...

      "do you want to perform this action?"... *click*... "press ctrl+alt+delete to enter your credentials"... *press the sequence, enter the credentials*... "do you want to perform this action?"... *click*... laptop is added to the domain.

      Yes, it actually asked me twice if I wanted to perform this action. I was even logged on as domain administrator, and still needed to go through the sequence, although I didn't actually have to enter my credentials.

      --
      Having a smoking section in a public restaurant is like having a peeing section in a public swimming pool.
    111. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by aqk · · Score: 0

      I'll tell you right now. the speedy feel of the XP days will never EVER come back,

      Those days never left. Both my XP AND my Vista systems have that snappy feel of Win2000.
      (AS well as my reliable old Win2000 system- tho, unlike XP and Vista, it occasionally BSDs)
      AND my Vista system runs in one Gig quite well. Might run faster in 2G tho, but I'm too cheap to replace the mem.

      Want a faster Vista? Get rid of all that blue marshmallow eye-candy crap.
      Make your system look as much as possible like W2K
      Basically I have a bunch of W2K systems. AND-
      And they are all supported by MS!
      Except for the "real" W2K one, which still has limited security support.
      Stop whining about Vista, weenies!

      .

    112. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by stuntpope · · Score: 1

      I thought the same thing and was amused, because the typical reaction has been "KDE looks like Windows"; now when I look at Windows 7, I first thought, hey, Windows looks like KDE!

    113. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Zebra_X · · Score: 1

      The start menu is nice, the 64-bit version of Vista is more widely supported by hardware vendors than XP64 was, printer drivers typically present the biggest challenge. Wireless management is much better on vista than XP. Network management in general though is more confusing. Backup and Restore on Vista is much better as well. The Vista install is very easy, and the recovery tools (if you need them) are more helpful than XP. Alt-tab and being able to click on the application screen is helpful too. Multi-monitor support on Vista is much better than XP. For developers who need to see how their applications are performing - the resource monitor is much, much better than previous versions of windows. UAC is helpful I think, and I leave it on, but it does annoy most people. The clock is much better allowing up to three faces in the task bar. This is really a help as I deal with people in different timezones.

      Honestly though, if you are Joe user, there is probably no reason to upgrade - when you get a new computer, just get it installed and not worry about it. Just make sure that you get enough RAM...

    114. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by norminator · · Score: 1

      I prefer SlickRun myself... it's tiny and very fast.

    115. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by dzfoo · · Score: 1

      You don't seem to get it. Sudo restricts access to the executable: the user needs to make the decision that the application is or is not trustworthy, so that once the application is trusted, it is implied that its operations are trusted.

      On the other hand, UAC restricts the operations that the application is performing. So even if the user trusts the application, he will still be prompted every time that program accesses another process, or communicates with the system in any way.

      The latter is a more granular model, sure, but the grand-parent poster's gripe was that there are no specific policies defined for what is trusted or untrusted behaviour: how is the user supposed to understand each and every nuanced operation his application performs to decide whether it should be trusted? The user then resigns to accepting the requests all the time, and eventually decides to disable the darn thing.

                -dZ.

      --
      Carol vs. Ghost
      ...Can you save Christmas?
    116. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Prefader · · Score: 1

      You may want to check up on what a command line is. I'm pretty sure that what is described in your quote isn't it.

    117. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd like to find these 15 000 rpm SATA drives you speak of. SAS maybe.

    118. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by EvanED · · Score: 1

      It's left to the user to determine if it's supposed to be valid or not, and user usually has no idea how to determine that.

      The user has about as much information as you do for sudo, at least as most users are concerned. ...so user only has to check if executable name matches.

      Which is basically the same as UAC prompts. They give you the executable name (though "helpfully" the full path is shortened with "..." if it's too long to fit in the window) which you can check.

      In fact, for most users, you will often get way more information than you get with sudo: the name of the application (in human-readable form, rather than just the exe name) and publisher, with electronic signature verified. Checking that you're running /usr/bin/cat or whatever is certainly a good idea so you don't pick up something else in your $PATH, but even that doesn't give you that level of authentication.

    119. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by bob.appleyard · · Score: 1

      Note that it does say on that page:

      SliTaz est francisée au mieux, le système peut aussi être utilisé en anglais

      Which, if my old and wizened French is on form, means that it works best in French, but can also be used in English.

      So, snappy, but you might get a whiff of onion now and again.

      --
      How dare you be so modest!! You conceited bastard!!
    120. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why would it matter how fast your drives spin? Once you've booted, the OS and desktop libraries are cached in memory anyway.

    121. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by MrNaz · · Score: 1

      This is the dumbest comment I've seen in a long, long time.

      The majority of people here who don't like Windows are running Linux, which is free, which is why they are happy to upgrade their OS all the time. They dislike the Windows world because in it you lose the capacity to upgrade the OS without upgrading their hardware.

      The other camp who are running Windows don't like upgrading their hardware precisely *because* they've just spent a pile of cash on an OS upgrade.

      So your argument is broken from both of your angles of attack. Which brings me to my final question: Were you born stupid or were you dropped on your head as a child?

      --
      I hate printers.
    122. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by cliveholloway · · Score: 1

      It was in KDE 3 - KDE's had it since 2006 - ALT + Space launches Katapult

      --
      -- Trinity in high heels carrying a whip: The donimatrix - there is no spoonerism
    123. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Teancum · · Score: 1

      I am also curious about what is so special and unique about this new version of Windows.

      For me, the "best" version of Windows was Win 2000 Professional, and everything after that simply sucks and is by far and away over bloated. Showing that this new version of Windows is better than Win 2k or XP by a huge margin would certainly help.

      Microsoft has shown that it takes a few versions to get thing right. Windows '95 was almost a joke (don't get me started on ME)... but it doesn't stop even there. MS-DOS version 3 was pretty bad until it got to version 3.3. Forget MS-DOS version 4 (a horrible mistake of an OS if I ever saw one) and it didn't really get fixed until version 5.

      Even the early version of Windows, "version 2" (also called Windows-386) almost killed Microsoft as a company. It wasn't until Windows 3 that Microsoft actually had a product worth looking at.

      So it is possible that Microsoft finally got their ducks in a row with this new operating system, learning from their previous failures. It is about time too. Still, I will remain highly skeptical until I actually get to see the thing and get to hammer into it for a little while. For the money that Microsoft dumps into a major rev cycle for their flagship operating system, you would think they would put a little more effort into their quality assurance and learn to remove more bloat.

      It shouldn't take a case of Blu-ray discs to install an operating system, yet that is what I'm expecting this time.

    124. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by scoot80 · · Score: 1

      My argument is broken from both angles of attack? Since when is posting my opinion an attack? Sounds like you have deep issues. Bad parenting? Your mother was too busy with her clients to breastfeed you?

    125. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this fish is called beta.

    126. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by oneTheory · · Score: 1

      What's fun is running XP on modern hardware. Then you have all those extra cycles for running applications, which is pretty much the point of an OS. I wiped Vista and installed XP and it's flying so fast I can now run all those silly add-ons like google desktop and not even notice. But the cool thing is if I really need the cycles I can get them back anytime I want without having to dig into the OS.

    127. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by johny42 · · Score: 1

      What's new in XP, except for the ugly blue window titlebars that everyone turns off the first thing after installation? If it's just support for newer hardware (XP doesn't need a floppy to install to a SATA drive, right?), then the same argument will apply to Vista in a year or two.

    128. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Win7 beta is pretty damn snappy on my 1.6GHz netbook. What the hell do you have running?

    129. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      Which is basically the same as UAC prompts. They give you the executable name (though "helpfully" the full path is shortened with "..." if it's too long to fit in the window) which you can check.

      No. With sudo you never see a question what exactly you are allowing or not allowing to be done, you only have to verify that executable is the one you have started. If any executable that is not started with sudo will try to do anything that require privileges it does not have, user will not be asked to confirm it -- access will be denied.

      With a proper (granted, not one that is usually set by default) configuration of sudo, all non-administrative utilities are allowed to be started with sudo in the first place, so user entering the password merely confirms that he intends to run administrative utility.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    130. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      utilities are allowed to be started with sudo in the first place

      Should be "are not allowed".

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    131. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm so bored of reading stuff like this.

      1] Right Click "My Computer"

      2] select "properties" to bring up the control panel system properties.

      3] select the "advanced" tab.

      4] click the "settings" button under the "performance" area.

      5] uncheck the box next to "enable desktop composition"

      6] click ok

      7] click ok

      congrats, you're back using a pseudo-XP amount of resources.

    132. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Considering IE already has special code to drop itself to lower privileges than normal...

    133. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by EvanED · · Score: 1

      With sudo you never see a question what exactly you are allowing or not allowing to be done... ...nor in UAC. Where on here or here (or any other screen shot you can find) does it tell you exactly what you are allowing or not allowing?

      I think you may have a misunderstanding of UAC. UAC doesn't prompt for permissions to perform a particular action (e.g. "I want to write to C:\Windows\System32"), it prompts for permission to upgrade a process to essentially the effective UID root, and it will (if granted) have those rights for the duration of the process. Later, if it wants to perform a different privileged action (e.g. "I want to write to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE in the registry") it will already have root, so there will not be a second UAC prompt. ...you only have to verify that executable is the one you have started.

      And, because of what I said above, this is also true of UAC. The only information the UAC prompt gives you is the executable name, which you can verify is what you intended. (Also the digital signature if present.)

      With a proper (granted, not one that is usually set by default) configuration of sudo, all non-administrative utilities are allowed to be started with sudo in the first place, so user entering the password merely confirms that he intends to run administrative utility.

      First, I would dispute your assertion that non-administrative utilities shouldn't be started with sudo. I think it's quite reasonable to run almost any of the most common utilities -- ls, cat, cp, mv, grep, find, etc. -- with sudo. I'm not a sysadmin, but coming from the perspective of a home user, it would irk me to no end if I couldn't do that. (Actually it wouldn't because of my aforementioned habit of keeping a root shell open at all times, but that's somewhat beside the point.) Outside of the home environment, sudo does have a couple significant advantages over UAC, most notably that UAC (AFAIK) requires the root password instead of the current user's password.

      Second, I could say the same thing about UAC that you say second: acknowledging the UAC prompt merely confirms that the user wants to run the administrative utility.

      I'm still not seeing anything more than a minor difference (that at least I would put pretty firmly in favor of UAC) unless you are actually misunderstanding UAC's behavior as I suggested above.

    134. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Allador · · Score: 1

      If you're on a domain, and you're the domain admin, and you dont like how UAC is configured out of the box, why dont you change it?

      You're basically running UAC in the non-domain home-user focused mode. If you dont like it that way, why do you insist on using it that way? Takes 2 minutes to change.

      The kind of thing you describe is the default settings targeted for a non-domain, non-corporate audience (ie, home users).

      If you want to not be prompted when you're explicitly logged in as an administrative user, then take the 60 seconds it takes to change it to that setting.

      You seem to be complaining about something that you dont really understand, and havent taken the short amount of time to figure it out.

    135. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One virus, several nights of painful urination.

    136. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by fatphil · · Score: 1

      "The only three things you may want to run as both root and regular user are: 1. network analyzer; 2. shell; 3. text editor"

      You're so right. I know that as root I never ever need to run ls, cat, grep, find, sort, sed, split, more, gzip, tar, mv, cp, perl, ...

      --
      Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
    137. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anyone know what these people are so excited about?

      Why they are excited about finally being able to put a finger in their leaking dike that is Vista. Personally I think users have been leaking away from Micrsoft OS since mid way through XP.

      And lets admit that this is NOT the first time this company (or others) have advertised vapor ware early in attempts to generate a buzz.

      Personally I wish them good luck, especially since it will not impact me as I will only use their OS for businesses where I am NOT given the choice to use either Linux or Macs....

    138. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by skiman1979 · · Score: 1

      If you're on a domain, and you're the domain admin, and you dont like how UAC is configured out of the box, why dont you change it?

      You seem to be complaining about something that you dont really understand, and havent taken the short amount of time to figure it out.

      Oh don't get me wrong, I understand how UAC works and how to disable it. That is why I said I'll probably end up disabling it. My point was just the fact that it is there, and especially that it is a bit intrusive, is annoying.

      Perhaps it's a good thing that it is so intrusive since it will potentially get people to think more and more about security and the need to run as a normal user, and could get developers to write their software more appropriately to take advantage of appropriate user permissions. For those of us who understand it already, it gets in the way, even just for the first few minutes before disabling it. It's just an annoying feature that could be done more like sudo in Linux.

      --
      Having a smoking section in a public restaurant is like having a peeing section in a public swimming pool.
    139. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever heard of Launchy?

      "SO fast at starting programs or finding files" all the way back from XP. Just hit alt+space and you get a little box.

    140. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you have available that you did not previously and does this make life more efficient?

      A few things I have found to be better in Vista compared to XP are DVD-RAM support is finally OK (i.e. it does not take forever to save something to DVD-RAM disk) and also the Media Center DVD support right out of the box is nice. Other than that, nothing comes to mind.

    141. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where did you find these "sata 15,000 rpm drives" you speak of? As far as I know the fastest SATA drives are 10k rpm's.

    142. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Allador · · Score: 1

      There are middle-grounds between the default home-user-targeted UAC configuration and completely turning it off.

      You can configure it so if you're logged in as an admin, you get no uac prompts at all, but regular non-priv'd users get prompted for credentials (ie, they have to put in a user/pass).

      You can configure it so that it prompts for a password, rather than just a 'confirm' button.

      There are other options as well.

      It's not nearly as fancy as sudo in that there's no configurable sudoers list. But other than that, it can be configured to work very similarly.

      For example, on our domain, we have it configured to prompt for credentials for non-admin users, and no prompt at all for admin users. So just like logging in as a regular user and using sudo, or just logging in as root. Works almost exactly the same.

      The biggest lack, in my mind, is that there's no way to launch an app from the command line with elevation. Ie, no runas functionality, its only available through the GUI with a right-click and 'Run as Administrator'.

      To deal with that, what we tend to do is fire up one command-line shell as admin, but run the rest of the system as a non-priv'd user (on our desktops and laptops, I mean).

    143. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by skiman1979 · · Score: 1

      It's good to know UAC has those configuration options other than just ON and OFF. I've never really taken the time to look into it. I just think the default is horrible.

      Even for a home user. I don't think your average home user is going to know what UAC is even prompting them for, and may just get in the habit of blindly clicking accept and entering credentials every time.

      A few years ago, I installed ZoneAlarm on my mother-in-law's computer to see how it would work for her and her family. It turned out to not be a good idea. I was constantly getting phone calls or emails every time there was a pop-up about " is trying to ". I kept trying to tell them to just deny everything unless they actually knew what the thing was trying to do AND if they wanted to really do that action. The calls didn't stop anyway, so I uninstalled it.

      I picture UAC for a home user being the same way. They'll get tired of the prompts, won't know you can turn it off, and will just blindly click through to make it go away. Defeats the real purpose of it, which seems to make it a bit useless.

      --
      Having a smoking section in a public restaurant is like having a peeing section in a public swimming pool.
    144. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Allador · · Score: 1

      I hate Vista, but had been reading good things about the performance and stability of Windows Server 2008 when converted to a workstation, so I gave it a try. I downloaded an evaluation copy and installed it on the only free space on my drive, which is the slowest inner 25GB. After following all the instructions available on the Internet, I had an OS that outperformed my XP Pro installation on everything except startup time--even with Aero fully enabled.

      Vista SP1 and Server 2008 are the same OS.

      If you are experiencing differences in reliability, speed, etc, then it is either:

      1. Hardware
      2. Drivers
      3. Configuration

      If its the same hardware, then you're probably dealing with driver issues or mis-configuration.

      Now mind you, most manufacturers terribly misconfigure Vista out of the box, so thats definitely part of it.

      But they're the same OS, or can be with configuration changes to Vista to make it configured like the server version.

    145. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by bensafrickingenius · · Score: 1

      "The best new feature of Vista, and it really, really is a nice one, is the instant Start Menu search. You can be SO fast at starting programs or finding files by just hitting the Windows key and typing the first few letters... However, these are things that can be added to XP

      For years I'd loved adding an address bar to my XP Taskbar. You'd just unlock the Taskbar, double its width, and enable the Address toolbar. You had instant program and URL launch available, and an added bonus was your clock now also displayed day and date since you fattened the Taskbar. Then I installed XP SP3 and damned if the bastards didn't totally disable this option. I'm so pissed.

      --
      I am not left-handed, either!
    146. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      With sudo it's not the action OF THE PROGRAM ITSELF that causes the prompt -- it's program being launched with sudo. Something (usually user himself, sometimes the program) has to explicitly run sudo/gksudo -- otherwise there will be no privileged access, period.

      First, I would dispute your assertion that non-administrative utilities shouldn't be started with sudo. I think it's quite reasonable to run almost any of the most common utilities -- ls, cat, cp, mv, grep, find, etc. -- with sudo. I'm not a sysadmin, but coming from the perspective of a home user, it would irk me to no end if I couldn't do that. (Actually it wouldn't because of my aforementioned habit of keeping a root shell open at all times, but that's somewhat beside the point.) Outside of the home environment, sudo does have a couple significant advantages over UAC, most notably that UAC (AFAIK) requires the root password instead of the current user's password.

      cp is an administrative utility when used on files and directories owned by root. It's also only used on command line, and it does not accept any user input except for confirmation, so user never has to deal with GUI password prompt when running it -- password prompt is always on the same terminal where the user started cp, so there can't be any doubt about what it applies to. UAC has nothing to do with command line or terminals, it's always a prompt out of nowhere. It can be just as well a virus waiting for anything to trigger UAC and race-condition it for the prompt, so the the user will "confirm" a virus instead of some other utility and be none the wiser. This scenario is the reason why I see typical "console user can sudo anything" policy as insecure, but with UAC it's the only configuration possible because there is no policy.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    147. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      With GUI prompt?

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    148. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by juventasone · · Score: 1

      15,000 SATA drives do no exist (SAS do). Obviously a troll.

    149. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by MoeDrippins · · Score: 1

      Don't you have to "pre-seed" it with what you want? (Apologies if not, I tried it once but it was long, long ago.)

      --
      Before you design for reuse, make sure to design it for use.
    150. Re:why aRe:They're glowing! by atraintocry · · Score: 1

      The two features you mentioned are great.

      However, these are things that can be added to XP

      I doubt that those who act astonished that Vista is heavier than XP are going to let a drive indexing service run in the background. Those cycles are worth saving, dammit!

      There is a certain type of "power user" that is happy, or even proud, to be locked into a particular way of doing things. They will get dragged kicking into the next decade, and we will have to endure the whining about how no one writes PC programs in assembly anymore.

      Too harsh? :)

  4. Waporware by Mr+Europe · · Score: 5, Interesting

    And we can start quessing which of the mentioned fine features will actually be in the release version of Win7. This has happened so many times before.
    Remember when during waiting of win95 many magazines were worried what will happen to McAfee and other virus-scanner companies when the new windows is fully virustolerant?

    1. Re:Waporware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Remember when during waiting of win95 many magazines were worried what will happen to McAfee and other virus-scanner companies when the new windows is fully virustolerant?

      Well, whatever one might think about windows 95, "virus-tolerant" is certainly an apt description!

    2. Re:Waporware by Jugalator · · Score: 1

      I think most will be in this time around, unlike with Vista, part because Vista was a more significant release, and part because MS at least claims to have learnt from their mistakes with Longhorn/Vista. There's some info on this online, but in general, they're more careful with announcing features this time around.

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    3. Re:Waporware by elashish14 · · Score: 1

      There are no new features in this build.

      I personally hope MS keeps it this way. Their idea of a 'feature' is usually the opposite of what customers want. Or so has been my experience.

      --
      I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
    4. Re:Waporware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are no new features in this build.

      ... which is why Microsoft will have to go and remove features which are currently shipping.

  5. ZDNet Is Full Of Pro-MS by Skeetskeetskeet · · Score: 1, Interesting

    They delegate Wal-Mart's selling the IPhone to a side note and instead are more concerned with Mary Jo's "Windows Name Of The Day" stories. ZDNet is the Enquirer of IT news.

    --
    Yeah, my karma sucks....but so do the mods.
  6. why is this surprising? by roc97007 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't see why this is surprising. This is just Windows Vista service pack 3 after all. Naturally the beta is going to be more stable than the initial Vista beta.

    --
    Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    1. Re:why is this surprising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Except that this one is prettier. Those techie nerds will love it when we steal KDE 3.5's look at make it Windows-y, right?

    2. Re:why is this surprising? by Enderandrew · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Well, I'm hearing claims that it will run well on a netbook with 512MB on ram and an Atom processor, which is a huge improvement over Vista. However, despite the supposed lower requirements and multi-touch gestures, I'm not sure what the benefits of Windows 7 are.

      --
      http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    3. Re:why is this surprising? by eebra82 · · Score: 1

      I don't see why this is surprising. This is just Windows Vista service pack 3 after all. Naturally the beta is going to be more stable than the initial Vista beta.

      The changes and additions that Windows 7 brings are more significant than you think. It's hardly a service pack because, as the name suggests, it would only pack services that need fixes. Although Vista isn't what many expected it to be, it's still fully functional. Windows 7 looks similar because it takes the best ideas of Vista and makes the rest of it better.

    4. Re:why is this surprising? by roc97007 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I agree, but, well, lower requirements is a big one. I remember an article in /. that pontificated that "Vista runs fine on any processor 3 Ghz and above" which is a bar that none of my computers can reach. Some are limited by architecture to 2 Gbytes ram, another buzzkill. (And why should I buy bleeding edge hardware -- in this economy -- to run Vista when XP runs fine?) If Windows 7 (any version) can run on netbook-level hardware, it actually has a chance in hell of replacing some of my XP installations. [1]

      And yet... and yet, when Vista was still in beta, we heard reports that it was faster than XP, and look how that turned out. So we really can't go by the beta, we have to wait for reports about the finished product. And then we find out if Microsoft really has made an effort to make the codebase more efficient, or if their real plan was to wait two more years for the hardware to catch up with Windows' gargantuan requirements.

      Before someone brings it up, I'm aware that much of Vista's performance issue was the way DRM was implemented. But since DRM is part and parcel with the operating system, it counts. It's the total end to end performance that makes the user experience, so it's not legitimate to say "the new OS really is much faster than the previous release, all those pauses and long execution times you're seeing is because the OS has to check every bit to make sure you haven't stolen something".

      Assuming, of course, there is some new feature I absolutely have to have. I didn't see any in Vista. Yes, it had a snazzy new interface. But since I turned off XP's snazzy new interface and all the irritating special effects when I installed it, why would I base a buying decision on yet another snazzy new interface I have to turn off?

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    5. Re:why is this surprising? by elashish14 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I don't see why this is surprising. This is just Windows Vista service pack 3 after all.

      Not really, the idea of a service pack is to add new features and plug a bunch of holes, like when XP SP2 added the security center. My hope is that Win7 guts most of the 'features' that were in Vista.

      --
      I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
    6. Re:why is this surprising? by elashish14 · · Score: 1

      However, despite the supposed lower requirements and multi-touch gestures, I'm not sure what the benefits of Windows 7 are.

      Win7 doesn't really need any new benefits. The greatest benefit is that it's an update from XP which is pretty much stone age software now. Personally, I think Windows would be much more attractive if they started taking features out and letting customers set it up to do what they want on their own. Average users may not have as much success with it, but it would be a little more tech savvy if that's what they did.

      --
      I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
    7. Re:why is this surprising? by lorenlal · · Score: 4, Informative

      1) It won't be named Vista.
      2) Supposedly, UAC is much more configurable, especially from the group policy angle.
      3) Not as much bloat is supposed to be bundled. If you want all the default MS software, you'll go to Windows Live to grab it. Bloat being: Media Player, the Movie Maker, Picture Gallery, etc. You'll get IE (cause you'll need something provided to go grab the stuff) and you'll get a pretty plain OS otherwise. I'm a huge fan of that.
      Other than that, I'm not sure if anything else has changed... But I expect that they've also worked on handling "very large files" and other stability stuff.

    8. Re:why is this surprising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Insightful"...? Only on Slashdot!

    9. Re:why is this surprising? by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      Yes, but, do you really think that's what's going to happen? Do you think Microsoft is going to do the right thing and rearchitect major parts of Vista for Windows 7? Even if they wanted to replace significant parts of the code base, they simply don't have the time.

      I expect somewhat more than "lipstick on a pig", but I don't expect much more than what we got with XP SP1 -- lots of bug fixes and a few new features. Keep in mind that "hope" and "expect" are two very different things. Many of us would like to see Windows 7 be a significant re-write. But realistically, I can't see how that could happen.

      Parenthetically, why are we all crouched over our keyboards on a Sunday morning?

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    10. Re:why is this surprising? by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

      XP runs fine for me. (I run XP Pro x64 actually). If there is no new benefit, then it isn't really an upgrade. And the performance on Windows 7 may be better than Vista, but is it better than the performance of XP?

      The only reason I keep a Windows partition is for gaming, yet I keep seeing users who can't install mods for games in Vista due to UAC, or games breaking due to UAC, poorer performance in Vista, driver issues in Vista, etc.

      I can't see one single benefit of moving to Vista (other than perhaps a native IPV6 stack which I get from Linux, and I don't really need since I'm behind a router) and there are tons of reasons to avoid it. I'm just hoping that Windows 7 isn't the same situation. I don't need to touch my monitor, nor do I own a touch screen. So right now, I'm not sure how Windows 7 will benefit me.

      --
      http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    11. Re:why is this surprising? by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

      In theory, if Windows trained users from day 1 not to run with admin rights, then we wouldn't have UAC issues. Apps that need rights to write to certain folders can be given those specific rights, and that can be handled in the installer for that app.

      --
      http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    12. Re:why is this surprising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally, I think Windows would be much more attractive if they started taking features out and letting customers set it up to do what they want on their own.

      You're looking for nlite or vlite.

    13. Re:why is this surprising? by schon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The changes and additions that Windows 7 brings are more significant than you think.

      But apparently not significant enough that you can actually name any of them.

    14. Re:why is this surprising? by TheNetAvenger · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I don't see why this is surprising. This is just Windows Vista service pack 3 after all. Naturally the beta is going to be more stable than the initial Vista beta.

      Although you are right that part of Windows7 success is the fact it is building on Vista technology with mature drivers that Vista RTM didn't have, it is a little silly to call it SP3.

      Building on the previous architectural shift is not going to be as dramatic, but there are enough 'technical' changes and 'technical' features in the OS to make it far more than a SP.

      There is still more difference between Windows7 and Vista than there is between OS X 10.0 and OS X 10.5 - yet I don't see people running around here calling OS X 10.x releases service packs.

      Windows 7 has new CPU scheduling, a revised WDDM, a revised DWM, I/O and kernel level locks removed, a new event based Service model (reducing RAM footprint), new low latency push/pull sound processing, and then starts adding end user features and upper level OS integration of features.

      This is like the Apple 300 list for leopard, Windows 7 has already about 3000 features over Vista, and this isn't even counting famous things in Apple's 300 features like 'New Airport Menu'...

    15. Re:why is this surprising? by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      > 1) It won't be named Vista.

      Good point. That gets them through the first weekend (to use a film metaphor). And the lack of add-ons, if true, will help because it'll make the OS seem faster out of the box. There will be a lot of marketing and social engineering tweaks to make Windows 7 successful, which means, to me, that we need to wait for real-world reports before making a decision. There is more reason than ever to be cautious of Release Mania.

      But hmm...

      > 3) Not as much bloat is supposed to be bundled. If you want all the default MS software, you'll go to Windows Live to grab it. Bloat being: Media Player, the Movie Maker, Picture Gallery, etc. You'll get IE (cause you'll need something provided to go grab the stuff) and you'll get a pretty plain OS otherwise. I'm a huge fan of that.

      As am I. This will help on new PC purchases, but not on upgrades, because presumably all that stuff already exists on the previous Vista install. It will be interesting to see what people's experiences are.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    16. Re:why is this surprising? by Constantine+XVI · · Score: 1

      At least part of the issue falls on the fact that the Win9x line was built as a single-user system. When XP (based on NT/2K) came along and replaced 9x, if they had forced non-admin accounts, all sorts of programs designed for 9x would be very confused when they found out they couldn't write to certain places.

      So, part of the problem is users, part is lazy developers, and part is Microsoft not providing a solution to allow legacy apps to run with restricted rights, without modification

      --
      "I think an etch-a-sketch with an ethernet port would beat IE7 in web standards compliance."
    17. Re:why is this surprising? by roc97007 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > Although you are right that part of Windows7 success is [...]

      Woah, partner -- it's way too early to be calling Windows 7 a success.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    18. Re:why is this surprising? by aftk2 · · Score: 1

      There is still more difference between Windows7 and Vista than there is between OS X 10.0 and OS X 10.5

      Heh. Please substantiate this claim. Perhaps you meant 10.4 and 10.5 (debatable) or 10.5 and the upcoming 10.6 (more debatable) but I think I would take umbrage with your initial assertion. UMBRAGE!

      --
      concrete5: a cms made for marketing, but strong enough for geeks.
    19. Re:why is this surprising? by pseudonomous · · Score: 1

      Well, according to these reviews of the Dell Inspiron Mini 12, vista already can run on a netbook with an intel atom processor and 1 GB of RAM, sluggishly, of course, but none the less... http://gizmodo.com/5093030/dell-inspiron-mini-12-review Also, Dell doesn't ship the Mini 12s with Vista anymore, they now, more sensibly, ship them with XP or Ubuntu.

    20. Re:why is this surprising? by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

      Please substantiate this claim.

      It's easy! OS X has always had the same "theme", whereas Windows changes them from version to version. Actually I wouldn't be surprised if subconsciously (or something like that) that was the reason why the GP found it so different.

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    21. Re:why is this surprising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is still more difference between Windows7 and Vista than there is between OS X 10.0 and OS X 10.5 - yet I don't see people running around here calling OS X 10.x releases service packs.

      Err you're joking right? You do know what a minor number revision is don't you?

    22. Re:why is this surprising? by nine-times · · Score: 1

      There is still more difference between Windows7 and Vista than there is between OS X 10.0 and OS X 10.5

      I'd like to hear some real support for this, not just citing "3000 features" vs. "300". What are those features, and what are the actual end-result of those features? I mean, you can point to every little change as a "new feature", but the question is, what is actually going to make a difference to anyone?

      yet I don't see people running around here calling OS X 10.x releases service packs.

      Yes, people do that all the time.

    23. Re:why is this surprising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree, but, well, lower requirements is a big one. I remember an article in /. that pontificated that "Vista runs fine on any processor 3 Ghz and above" which is a bar that none of my computers can reach. Some are limited by architecture to 2 Gbytes ram, another buzzkill.

      But then you get into the whole megahertz discussion, where a 3.0 GHz P4 is slower than a 2.x GHz Athlon is slower than a 1.n GHz Core 2. Processors are so much more powerful now, it isn't even worth thinking about their numerical "speed."

    24. Re:why is this surprising? by bhpaddock · · Score: 1

      Indeed. How many times has the Finder seen a major rewrite since 10.0?

      In Windows 7 about half of the Explorer was rewritten from scratch. I should know, I work on it ;)

    25. Re:why is this surprising? by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      How hard is it to google or Wikipedia? I know it's easier asking others to spoonfeed them and counter them if they don't. Here are some videos if you're really interested.

      --
      This space for rent.
    26. Re:why is this surprising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      10.0, 10.3, 10.5 (slightly minor), 10.6 (being re-written in Cocoa)

    27. Re:why is this surprising? by CatOne · · Score: 1

      So the OS is the Finder, then?

      If you make the criteria sufficiently small I guess you can say that, but, really, the Finder is a very, very small part of the OS as a whole. Certainly nothing that can substantiate the claim about changes between Vista and Windows 7 being greater than the changes between 10.0 and 10.5. There are _huge_ changes in the latter.

    28. Re:why is this surprising? by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      You made the claim, sir, you get to back it up. You list a lot of presentations, none of which (by their titles) actually list improvements in Windows 7 over XP. Some titles, in fact, sound like they're an excuse to duplicate the errors of Vista, such as:

              The next generation user experience for presenting commands in Win32 applications.

      If that doesn't sound like an excuse to re-arrange and proprietize things to break backwards compatibility and help cut off XP users, I don't know what does.

    29. Re:why is this surprising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vista IS faster than XP when it comes down to a lot of games and things like that. This is why you heard it was faster; Because it's true. Only the desktop is a bit slower, but the majority of "benchmarkers" who decide if your system is fast or not do not really care about that, as we spend most of our time playing.

    30. Re:why is this surprising? by gparent · · Score: 1

      I hate spoon-feeding trolls, but here it goes:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Features_new_to_Windows_7

    31. Re:why is this surprising? by socsoc · · Score: 1

      So Brushed Metal and Aqua are the same "theme?"

    32. Re:why is this surprising? by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      Thank you, that is a _much_ better reference.

    33. Re:why is this surprising? by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > You'll get IE (cause you'll need something provided to go grab the stuff)
      > and you'll get a pretty plain OS otherwise. I'm a huge fan of that.

      I would be, if getting the stuff you need consisted of ticking a few boxes in a package management tool and hitting the "install" button once. Think in terms of Synaptic or rpmdrake or cetera.

      I realize it wouldn't be practical to include a full assortment of third-party software in such a scheme, nor probably stuff like Word (because of licensing issues), but anything Microsoft makes that's freely downloadable anyway *should* be able to be quickly and easily installed this way. It would be a major improvement over separately tracking down each item and running a separate installer for each one.

      The uninstall UI is already pretty well present, in the Add/Remove Programs section of the control panel. But last I checked you can't really download and install stuff from there, except for things that MS considers to be OS components.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    34. Re:why is this surprising? by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      Do you think Microsoft is going to do the right thing and rearchitect major parts of Vista for Windows 7?

      What do you think needs "rearchitecting" and why ?

    35. Re:why is this surprising? by gparent · · Score: 1

      Well apologies for calling you a troll, then. It seems you are much nicer about it than I thought.

    36. Re:why is this surprising? by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

      I'm still waiting for the asynchronous I/O that some MS weenie claimed made W2K better than Linux.

    37. Re:why is this surprising? by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      You made the claim, sir, you get to back it up. You list a lot of presentations, none of which (by their titles) actually list improvements in Windows 7 over XP. Some titles, in fact, sound like they're an excuse to duplicate the errors of Vista, such as:

      The next generation user experience for presenting commands in Win32 applications.

      If that doesn't sound like an excuse to re-arrange and proprietize things to break backwards compatibility and help cut off XP users, I don't know what does.

      I didn't make the claim. Learn to read and comprehend. Do you watch movies by reading the titles and watch entire multiple tv programs from the onscreen guide itself? And you're criticizing Windows 7 based on a title of a video? Wow, looks like you're already bent upon putting fingers in your ears and shouting 'la la la'. And you thanked the other poster for googling for you and giving you the first linke? Ignorance is not an excuse.

      --
      This space for rent.
    38. Re:why is this surprising? by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Have you tried Server 2008? It makes a good workstation and because everything is modular and you only install the stuff you need it runs okay on fairly low end hardware (compared to Vista).

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    39. Re:why is this surprising? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      But apparently not significant enough that you can actually name any of them.

      http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1074689&cid=26250311

    40. Re:why is this surprising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Other than that, I'm not sure if anything else has changed... But I expect that they've also worked on handling "very large files" and other stability stuff.

      The complete disappearance of "Printers and Faxes" hasn't sunk in for you yet?

    41. Re:why is this surprising? by Dan541 · · Score: 1

      Vista DRM???

      My Piracy is still as strong as ever.

      --
      An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
    42. Re:why is this surprising? by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      The ability to easily encrypt flashdrives and other removable media (using BitLocker) is a pretty nice one if you have any kind of sensitive data you need moved/stored. BitLocker in Vista doesn't support encryption of removable devices, and certainly doesn't support decrypting them on other computers than the one that encrypted them in the first place. It required some significant changes to add this feature (yes, I worked on this).

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    43. Re:why is this surprising? by Dan541 · · Score: 1

      I keep seeing users who can't install mods for games in Vista due to UAC, or games breaking due to UAC, poorer performance in Vista, driver issues in Vista, etc.

      That's a user problem not an OS problem.
      If they knew what they where doing they would not encounter these problems, people keep expecting Vista to be the same as XP when it is of course a different operating system.

      It's like a Windows user trying to use Linux and treating it like windows. (Ok, mayb not quite as bigger gap)

      --
      An SQL query goes to a bar, walks up to a table and asks, "Mind if I join you?"
    44. Re:why is this surprising? by Eskarel · · Score: 1

      UAC had a lot of problems, not least of which was the fact that there was no way to explicitly grant certain applications the right to do certain things that they were going to do, whether they should have done them or not, anyway. I turned it off for that very reason after only a few months with Vista.

      The biggest problem with UAC is the same problem which faces most Operating Systems, the fact that people(including the developers themselves) don't really understand what is and isn't dangerous modification of the system and instead try to class to much into that category.

      It doesn't really matter, on a system with a single user or a single data set(like most windows systems) whether you are admin or not. A non admin user on linux can still run an smtp server(on a non standard port), the user still has access to all the data that's important to them(because it's their data), and the user still has the ability to run applications automatically on startup. The only thing that a non admin linux user can't do is corrupt the core system, but if you're the only user of the system, corrupting your own user is realistically enough damage.

      Windows doesn't allow you to do most of those things as a non admin user(you can still auto run programs though), but because it doesn't, you need to be able to elevate your rights in order to do things, and that ability to elevate adds the same security holes that running as admin does. The only data which really matters is the data of the user(s), if there's only one user, or if all users are sharing access to the same core data, then the difference between hosing an OS and hosing the data on that OS(which a normal user can do) is that hosing the data is actually worse. Reinstalling windows, or linux, or presumably OSX is a couple of hours work, and everyone knows someone who can be cajoled, bribed, or paid to do it. Getting back data you have lost can sometimes be impossible.

      If you want a secure system, what you really need is to design a system where an application has to designate what resources it is going to use when it is installed, the user explicitly grants permission to those resources and the OS blocks it from accessing anything else and alerts the user if it attempts to do so.

      This would be a pretty massive change in the way computers work though, and would be extremely limiting to both developers and users, but it's really the only thing that would work. Everything else is a farse.

    45. Re:why is this surprising? by setagllib · · Score: 1

      Windows 7 has new CPU scheduling, a revised WDDM, a revised DWM, I/O and kernel level locks removed, a new event based Service model (reducing RAM footprint), new low latency push/pull sound processing, and then starts adding end user features and upper level OS integration of features.

      That sounds like what gets changed every 3-6 months in a Linux distribution like Ubuntu or Fedora. Are you suggesting that even after 2 years of full time work Microsoft can only make such small incremental improvements to Vista?

      Hell, even the short changelog of the Linux kernel itself is more impressive once every ~3 months. What is Microsoft wasting so much time on?

      --
      Sam ty sig.
    46. Re:why is this surprising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, are you implying that a post by someone else, an hour after eebra82's message proves that he knew what the alleged features are?

    47. Re:why is this surprising? by schon · · Score: 1

      How hard is it to google or Wikipedia?

      Why on earth would google or Wikipedia have any information on eebra82's knowledge of Windows features?

      Here's a tip for you: if someone makes a claim but doesn't substantiate it, and they get slammed for it, don't be an apologist for them. It just makes you look like an idiot.

    48. Re:why is this surprising? by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      As I'm not a domain controller, I can't speak on the Group Policy stuff (with regard to UAC, Win7 does have some new GP stuff elsewhere taht I know of). However, UAC is actually already configurable through the Local Security Policy (accessible through the Administrative Tools menu).

      One recommendation I always make to people who've always run as Admin, can't imagine doing otherwise, and can't stand UAC is: don't turn it off (making everything run with Admin privileges again) but instead use the Local Security Policy to make it so that privilege elevation is granted automatically (without prompting). This is less secure that prompting, but still much better than running everything as admin always.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    49. Re:why is this surprising? by TheNetAvenger · · Score: 1

      That sounds like what gets changed every 3-6 months in a Linux distribution like Ubuntu or Fedora

      Really? And they are fixing the hard coded locking mechanism when again? They are abandoning the frame buffer video when?

      At this point, the Linux releases are more duct tape than 'change', and I am a fan of Linux.

      MS rips apart a complex OS that spans many layers, not just a kernel, and rebuilds it, and the Linux community stands around and goes, oh, they made the buttons prettier. WTF?

      And the OS X community goes, MS's buttons aren't as pretty as ours. WTF?

      Let Apple rip OS X apart and put in a new video driver model (Hell even good Graphical APIs that actually work beyond the 1999 Display Postscript crap.)

      Let Linux actually go back and 'fix' many of the things even Linus knows needs to be updated or changed, but would break too many things or is so nested throughout the spaghetti code, it would take a lot of work just to get it fixed and back to a stability state it now enjoys. (The scheduler and hard lock issues alone speak volumes for this.)

      MS creates a new scheduler - removes locks layer by layer, adds in a new memory management system, recreates the driver kernel relationsihp and implements new Video and Audio technologies, and keeps the 'client subsystems' running as normal and happy. And people still make fun of them?

      Wow, talk about religious computing... I know we are supposed to hate MS, but when they do things right and leapfrog the OSS OS world, people should stop looking at the Glass and buttons and going 'pretty' and instead be looking at the advances that can cripple other OSes.

      Vista right now can do pre-emptive GPU operations with an OS level GPU scheduler, GPU virtualization and GPU RAM Virtualization. THESE ARE NOT TINY THINGS.

      Vista also has an intelligent memory management system that extends from memory priority flags to a OS level tracking system that it can gather data from to make things like Superfetch pay off in terms of knowing what to cache and even what time of the day to cache it.

      These are not 'baby' concepts and gives Windows 7 an architectural framework to bury other OS technologies, and yet here we are again, going oh, the 'buttons are pretty' and not giving a crap what is under the hood that makes Linux looks old with spaghetti code and OS X even older with a basic 32bit kernel structure that has changed VERY LITTLE since 10.0.

      I don't care if you hate MS and hate Windows7, but pull your heads out of the sand, go read some of the technical papers (low level kernel architecture even) and stop riding on the coattails of expecting MS to continuing to screw up. They are starting to get some 'advanced' OS theory stuff right and implemented right.

      Ironically MS is being played as the 'technical' underdog by the OSS community itself, while MS is shoving technical advances that make key foundations of Linux and even *nix itself obsolete.

      Stop watching the pretty buttons, and pay attention to what MS is actually doing for once... (They hire really smart people, with backgrounds in OSS and *nix, hell the creator of MACH works for Microsoft - Do you really think the MS Engineers are stupid or don't get it?)

    50. Re:why is this surprising? by MobyTurbo · · Score: 1

      There is still more difference between Windows7 and Vista than there is between OS X 10.0 and OS X 10.5 - yet I don't see people running around here calling OS X 10.x releases service packs.

      I suggest you, since you obviously haven't run 10.0 through 10.5 of OS X, take a look at the amount of development and improvements in performance and reliability (with the possible exception of Leopard, which was mostly features and a much-needed interface cleanup, but Snow Leopard's supposed to fix Leopard) over it's lifetime. Compared to Windows 7, which is based very much on Vista with a bit of a more Mac-like interface, it is rediculous to claim that there's more differences between Windows 7 and Vista than between 10.0 OS X Cheetah 8 years ago and Leopard.

      Unless by difference you mean Windows 7 might not suck eggs as much as Vista, I suppose that is a big difference of sorts, though not one to be proud of. ;-)

    51. Re:why is this surprising? by MtViewGuy · · Score: 1

      Actually, Windows 7 is essentially Windows Vista Second Edition. Think of it as Vista with interface improvements, some internal OS improvements, and more hardware support.

    52. Re:why is this surprising? by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      I like that. But going with that analogy, it would be OEM only unless you Know Someone. Since it will be offered for sale, it seems to me more like a service pack that we're expected to pay an additional $339.99 for. Wow, to the marketeers it must seem like printing money.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    53. Re:why is this surprising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      look at the icons on the bar. Bigger ;p

      No seriously, it's one big new feature. Those icons do a bunch of new things that wasn't possible before.

      And for you mac fans, windows 1.0 had a similar design. Pre-dates the dock by few years (nextstep dock that is).

    54. Re:why is this surprising? by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      And guess what? Because of Vista, most apps that require admin rights are being redesigned around it, so that they won't trigger Vista's annoying nonconfigurable UAC popups. So, when Windows 7 comes out, it'll be mostly a non-issue anyway.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    55. Re:why is this surprising? by TheNetAvenger · · Score: 1

      take a look at the amount of development and improvements in performance and reliability

      Instead of looking at the duct tape Apple has been slapping on for 8 years, why don't we look at the architectural changes instead.

      When you do, you will see my point explain itself.

      Show me where Apple redesigned the audio system, driver mechanism, memory manager, introduced a new scheduler, replaced the network stack with newer technology, attached a new video driver model.

      Heck even show me where Apple built a true '64bit' version of OS X, instead of a 32bit kernel architecture that allows applications to flag for 64bit memory addressing? (Ask Adobe how the 64bit migration path they were promised is working out for them, since the only 64bit versions of their commercial software only runs on Vista x64 - a real 64bit OS.

      Polishing the OS X 'apple' is what MS calls SPs, and Apple calls new OSes and changes $99 for...

      And if you really want to get into this, we can start with Darwin, Apple's driver model, and work our way up to the STILL USED display postscript of the GUI that technically lags behind GDI+ of XP.

      I love how people look at the stability updates and 'refining' of OS X as progress, and the new version of iTunes or a couple of features in the Dock as OS progress, while Apple is racing to keep the duct tape on the architecture while trying to strap on some new features.

      Have you actually played with Snow Leopard - the first semi-64bit attempt of OS X? Seamless integration is not a word that comes to mind. It is more duct tape and some really scary failures in usability based on how Apple is trying to frankenstein the OS together. When a legacy 32bit applet requires the control panel application to restart in 32bit mode, there is a serious architectural design flaw in the OS itself.

      Being someone that actually worked with Darwin code and spent time with the Apple driver model (that had potential) and has seen Apple stop any real OS advancements and instead keep running around and putting duct tape on the 'aged' BSD/MACH concepts, I am embarrassed for Apple...

      If they didn't have brilliant marketing and users that don't give a crap about future features, they would already be choking. For example look at the NVidia dual-GPUs they released earlier this year. OS X is not architecturally capable of on the fly switching video devices/modes, and requires the user to log out so OS X can reboot the GUI. If the OS X architecture was just a bit more advanced, it wouldn't force users to do this, nor would it have to keep dual drivers active for the GUI switch. In contrast, on Vista, it is automatic and seamless to the user because the Vista video architecture is designed with newer concepts like this in mind - yes something MS did right.

      Like I have said before, there is a reason the creator of MACH works for MS, even he knew the MACH limitations and like other OS engineers is dumbfounded that Apple is still trying to put band-aids on a very old design to try to make it functional on today's advancing hardware. His interview about MACH on the iPhone is borderline sad.

      Just the work alone that Apple has put into reducing the multi-processing traps of the BSD/MACH interface and trying to layer off the kernel in an additional hybrid abstraction just to avoid message queue congestion is sad in and of itself. It is also why OS X at its core will never be as fast as Linux or NT.

      I truly get tired of the fanboi's view of OSes... Vista is wonderful, OS X is wonderful, Linux is wonderful... Gag...

      Why can't the OSes just be what they are 'human-made' and get rid of the blind religious crap.

      So what if Apple sometimes sucks at things, deal with it and move on. It doesn't mean you have to give up OS X and move to Linux or Vista. It also doesn't mean you have to love Linux or Vista. But it should give you the freedom to not be scared and actually look at your OS without the rose colored glasses - and when you do this, you gain power, as you are t

    56. Re:why is this surprising? by Daengbo · · Score: 1

      Really? And they are fixing the hard coded locking mechanism when again? They are abandoning the frame buffer video when?

      Your answer:

      There has been a lot of work in the latest years to modernize the Linux graphics stack so that it's both well designed and also ready to use the full power of modern and future GPUs. In 2.6.28, Linux is adding one of the most important pieces of the stack: A memory manager for the GPU memory, called GEM ("Graphic Execution Manager"). The purpose is to have a central manager for buffer object placement, caching, mapping and synchronization. On top of GEM are being built a lot of improvementes to the graphic stack: Kernel Modesetting, DRI2, UXA (a EXA implementation based in GEM). The Linux/FOSS graphics stack will be finally unified and optimally coupled. -- Kernel Newbie on 2.6.28

      I agree that MS has done some pretty cool stuff recently, but the main achievement is trying to improve whiile retaining complete backward compatibility.

      OS X also has a great developer stack, I understand, which exposes all the important functionality in the OS elegantly. Linux + Gnome (or KDE) is also moving forward really well. Vala promises to make developing for Gnome a much nicer process. GStreamer + Telepathy is going to make things really nice.

    57. Re:why is this surprising? by Daengbo · · Score: 1

      So ... Vista ME?

    58. Re:why is this surprising? by MobyTurbo · · Score: 1

      take a look at the amount of development and improvements in performance and reliability

      Instead of looking at the duct tape Apple has been slapping on for 8 years, why don't we look at the architectural changes instead.

      When you do, you will see my point explain itself.

      Show me where Apple redesigned the audio system, driver mechanism, memory manager, introduced a new scheduler, replaced the network stack with newer technology, attached a new video driver model.

      The network stack has been replaced with the one in FreeBSD, and the audio system has been redesigned, and the memory manager has undergone changes. Some of those other things haven't been changed as much as in Windows because they aren't as broken as Windows 9x was. You really don't know what you're talking about, do you. :-)

      Heck even show me where Apple built a true '64bit' version of OS X, instead of a 32bit kernel architecture that allows applications to flag for 64bit memory addressing?

      The kernel is 32 bit, but then we're talking about Mach, the microkernel, the rest of the OS is 64 bit, but supports 32 bit applications and drivers transparently. That is going to change in Snow Leopard. I think they've done a better job even than Linux at making a 64 bit transition, Apple has practice in making architectural transitions of this nature, going back to the 68K to PPC transition and others.

      (Ask Adobe how the 64bit migration path they were promised is working out for them, since the only 64bit versions of their commercial software only runs on Vista x64 - a real 64bit OS.

      Please, Adobe was told that Carbon was going to be phased out 8 years ago. Their choice to avoid doing things the NextStep way and relying on depreciated APIs from OS9 and earlier bit them. Most other software makers besides Adobe and Microsoft on OS X don't rely on Carbon, and if they did, made the transition.

      Polishing the OS X 'apple' is what MS calls SPs, and Apple calls new OSes and changes $99 for...

      And if you really want to get into this, we can start with Darwin, Apple's driver model, and work our way up to the STILL USED display postscript of the GUI that technically lags behind GDI+ of XP.

      It depends upon what your technical criteria are. GDI+ isn't very portable. Display Postscript is more the historical Unix approach to the problem, such as NeWS.

      Have you actually played with Snow Leopard - the first semi-64bit attempt of OS X? Seamless integration is not a word that comes to mind. It is more duct tape and some really scary failures in usability based on how Apple is trying to frankenstein the OS together. When a legacy 32bit applet requires the control panel application to restart in 32bit mode, there is a serious architectural design flaw in the OS itself.

      When an operating system requires that old drivers be re-written and that many applications fail to work for their 64 bit versions of their operating systems; to the point that people still prefer their 32 bit operating systems, what do you call that? People in glass-(windows) houses shouldn't throw stones. ;-)

      Being someone that actually worked with Darwin code and spent time with the Apple driver model (that had potential)

      Considering your factual errors, I think this fact about your biography is as likely as the concept that there are women on slashdot. ;-) (Just kidding ladies, er, or whatever you're calling yourself!)

      I personally use Vista more than 50% of the time for my personal computing, and this gives me power, as I don't love everything about it, and I can see the freaking flaws and I do scream at Microsoft. With enough people taking notice of 'crap', companies like Microsoft do listen, and it may shock Apple at first, but they will start to listen too when their u

    59. Re:why is this surprising? by s66iw · · Score: 1
    60. Re:why is this surprising? by somenickname · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure how "Applications I don't use" are bloat. With machines with disks in the 500GB to 1TB range, an extra 50M of dormant software doesn't seem very detrimental to me.

    61. Re:why is this surprising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right. But it's never too early for a linux fanboyslashdot reader to call it a miserable failure!

    62. Re:why is this surprising? by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      Aside from cloning the look and feel of KDE 4... What substantive abilities does Windows 7 give us that are not already available in Linux, OS X, and/or XP? Are there any non-artificial advantages afforded us by running Windows 7 over the previously mentioned?

      Are they using the promised MinWin microkernel? How about WinFS? With the hundreds of millions of R & D dollars at their disposal is it really so unreasonable to expect something revolutionary?

      Given that malware in numerous forms has been Microsoft's weak spot almost since their first issuance of software back in the 80's why hasn't this been truly addressed? How long have computer scientists been batting about the idea of an adaptive immune system built into the OS? We've understood for over a decade that signature based anti-viral software is a broken, resource hungry model that needs to be replaced.

      I cannot find a single substantial thing neither for the user nor the developer in Windows 7 that wasn't in Vista, nor readily accomplished in Linux, OS X or XP. This is nothing more than a redressed Vista and the article author is nothing more than another MS shill.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    63. Re:why is this surprising? by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      That's an interesting solution. How well would it work as a media center?

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    64. Re:why is this surprising? by TheNetAvenger · · Score: 1

      Your answer:

      There has been a lot of work in the latest years to modernize the Linux graphics stack

      Exactly, but this is really late in the game, and should have been a priority 5 or more years ago. When people like me were screaming for people to look behind the curtain at MS, the response in the OSS world was M$ $ucks, we don't care, we don't need pretty crap, etc etc...

      The GEM work in Linux is a 'start' but years behind Vista's WDDM technologies; WDDM and the Video architecture in Vista is a result of joint work of the Research, DirectX, and XBox 360 engineers at MS that goes back to the late 90s.

      Even MS is catching up to itself, as the XBox 360's video subsystem is still doing things that Vista can't do, but Windows7 will be doing. These are part of the DirectX11 and WDDM 1.1 features - and will make development between the XBox 360 and the PC once again a virtual recompile if DirectX11 for Vista or Win7 is targeted.

      Chipset Shared GPU RAM management from the GEM project is truly a drop in the bucket in comparison to Vista's ability to share dedicated VRAM across GPU MFRs and GPU pre-emptive multi-tasking. Even SLI and Crossfire are old, and if ATI or NVidia targeted Vista ONLY, they could use multi-GPU/multi-core technology inherently at the OS level without a dual rendering system like SLI and Crossfire provide.

      This is some really big and low level technology support that Vista is already designed to do and MS will only improve it.

      OS X and Linux is getting left behind, with Apple focusing on OpenCL and also shoving processing through CPU/SSE and leaving the 3D GPU as a glorified texture/surface composer still rendering display postscript level APIs. Apple has some good ideas, but they don't make it to the developers, look at Quartz technologies, what was promised, what was delivered and what has been abandoned. Their latest announcement is a version of Quartz that rides on OpenGL, that is a sad copy of WPF and the programming model around WPF in Vista.

      OpenCL has some cool things, don't get me wrong, but if you work with, or even look up the specifications of OpenCL, they read like DirectX10 and its mathematical and physics processing, and is almost a full generation behind DirectX11's extension of these technologies that have been running on the XBox 360 since 2005.

      And with GEM and OpenCL, if it wasn't for a helping hand from Intel, neither would ever exist.

      On the other hand, MS is defining the GPU designs and GPU market, not following what is provided to them like Linux and OS X do. Start from the unified shader technologies that MS introduced (again in the 360) to even hardware level rendering consistency that DirectX10 and DirectX11 requires from ATI and NVidia.

      And like I said above, if NVidia or ATI makes a Vista ONLY GPU/Video card, it will do things the other OSes can't use for a long long time. (Just like the dual integrated/dedicated NVidia GPUs that OS X is using, and have had to create a band-aid solution just to switch the GPU contexts - where Vista the technology to flip between the GPUs on the fly was designed into the WDDM years ago. (XP can't even use these features like Vista can.)

    65. Re:why is this surprising? by TheNetAvenger · · Score: 1

      haven't been changed as much as in Windows because they aren't as broken as Windows 9x was. You really don't know what you're talking about, do you. :-)

      Let me stop you right there...

      You don't even realize that Windows 9x and Windows NT (Win2k,XP,Vista) are two entirely different architectures...

      Win9X was an x86 assembly optimized DOS/Hybrid Win32 kernel and HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH MODERN WINDOWS OR NT.

      Even comparing Win9X not only says you know nothing, but here is how insane it is... Let me replace your words with technology you understand so you know how insane this would sound if I said this but referenced Apple technologies in place of Windows:

      "and the memory manager has undergone changes. Some of those other things haven't been changed as much as in OS X because they aren't as broken as System 9 was."

      Do you see how you are conflating two entirely different operating systems? Win9X has truly NOTHING to do with Windows NT, which is the core OS technology of Windows for the past 10 years.

      When Microsoft abandoned the Win9X OSes and jumped users to WindowsXP, it was as massive of a change was when Apple abandoned System 9 and moved users to OS X.

      (It only 'kind of' looked like previous versions of Windows because it was 'designed' to, and it let previous applications written for Win9X run seamlessly because of how MS engineered the Win32 subsystem on NT - NT can do older API level VM technology inherently because it is a client/server kernel. - This is why XP and Vista can also run a full BSD subsystem along side Win32/Win64 subsystems.)

      As for NT's memory management, it was light years ahead of System 9 and Win9X when it was designed back in 1992, and to this day, the only MAJOR change was in Vista (yes 15 years later) to add a priority flag to the memory allocation so that the OS can do intelligent things with the Memory and the processes attached to it.

      Holy crap batman - please go Wiki this stuff.

      And for the last time, can people on Slashdot and the Apple world FINALLY GET IT THROUGH THEIR HEADS that the Win9x/WinME that they were using 10 years ago is dead and gone just like System9 is dead and gone and has NOTHING to do with the modern Windows versions (Win2k/Vista/Win7) that is based on the NT kernel architecture.

      And if you want to compare NT to OS X, you better do your homework, as NT is not your grandfathers Win9X OS...

      Oh one more thing...
      When an operating system requires that old drivers be re-written and that many applications fail to work for their 64 bit versions of their operating systems; to the point that people still prefer their 32 bit operating systems

      You realize that OS X is a 32bit OS and even Snow leopard will STILL have a 32bit kernel, and this is why they won't require drivers to be recompiled for 64bit operation?

      Heck MS could have stayed with Windows 3.1 and the 16bit drivers if that was their goal and just slapped paint on Windows 3.1 to allow it to run 32bit and 64bit applications, all being choked by the 16bit OS running under them. WHICH IS EXACTLY WHAT APPLE IS DOING by keeping OS X 32bit. But hey, their drivers don't have to be changed. Geesh.

      Because Vista x64 and XP x64 are REAL and FULL 64bit OSes they get the benefits of 64bit computing 'BEYOND 64bit Memory Addressing', and this is why they run 15% faster than their 32bit counterparts.

      Also if you want to make fun of 'Drivers' Vista x64 has more drivers than Windows XP 32bit does, and somewhere in the neighborhood of 1000x more drivers than OS X.

      Talk about glass houses...

    66. Re:why is this surprising? by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      I don't think it includes Media Centre but I can't see any reason why you couldn't do what I do and just use Media Player Classic or XBMC.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    67. Re:why is this surprising? by Daengbo · · Score: 1

      I was just pointing it out in case you weren't aware. Since GEM supposedly unifies the FB with other graphics systems, I thought your question about getting rid of the framebuffer pointed to that fact. I wasn't arguing a point.

    68. Re:why is this surprising? by Allador · · Score: 1

      When an operating system requires that old drivers be re-written and that many applications fail to work for their 64 bit versions of their operating systems; to the point that people still prefer their 32 bit operating systems, what do you call that? People in glass-(windows) houses shouldn't throw stones. ;-)

      Are you trying to imply in a very roundabout way that there are significant application compatibilities on x64 versions of windows?

      There arent. We've got a mix of both in our office, on both servers and desktops.

      All drivers need to be re-done for 64-bit, but thats par for the course in all operating systems.

      Other than that, the only apps that have compatibility issues are the very rare VPN client and very low level stuff like firewalls or anti-virus.

      The vast, vast majority of old apps work just fine on x64 windows, because they're running in an x86 compatibility layer.

    69. Re:why is this surprising? by TheNetAvenger · · Score: 1

      I was just pointing it out in case you weren't aware. Since GEM supposedly unifies the FB with other graphics systems, I thought your question about getting rid of the framebuffer pointed to that fact. I wasn't arguing a point.

      Sorry if my response was a bit long, and yes I understood what you were getting at.

      The problem is that all of this is happening 'today' and not 5 years ago when it should have been happening. Also what is happening today is still just consolidating and updating with a few low level features added in.

      OSS OS technologies are so losing right now, it is scary... And my 5 years of yelling and screaming and poking people with a stick still falls on deaf ears most of the time.

  7. Do these get better just because of time? by plover · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Everyone seems to have the opinion that Vista was a failure. My wife (a non-techie) hates Vista because her ancient accounting app periodically crashes ever since switching to Vista. I assume many other people had the same sorts of issues with many other apps.

    But now three years have gone by, and many of those apps have been patched, become obsolete, or replaced with working alternatives. That means the remaining apps are now in an ideal position to work correctly in Windows 7. Is it possible that Windows 7 could be exactly the same crap as Vista, but because so much time has gone by it doesn't matter as much?

    I think we saw the same thing with the transitions from Windows 98 to Windows ME to Windows XP.

    --
    John
    1. Re:Do these get better just because of time? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      There is one other possibility, of course - that Vista never was crap, and the MS excuses about driver and application incompatibilities (such as your wife's accounting app) unfairly being blamed on Vista were actually true. And, if anyone were to give Vista a fair fresh look (Mojave? Win7?) they might conclude it's actually a really solid OS.

      Nah, on second thought, that doesn't fit well with my world view. MS Sucks! Linux roxors!

    2. Re:Do these get better just because of time? by Farmer+Pete · · Score: 5, Informative

      Most of the problems of Vista wasn't with Vista itself, it was with applications that were written poorly. I work for a company with ~2500 computers. We have over 10,000 unique pieces of software installed company wide. Many of those pieces of software were designed for Win95/98 and were only tweaked to work with XP. For example, they insist on installing to the root of C:\, the don't play well with multi-user installs, or they write data to their program files folder. I personally believe that Microsoft should get a medal for what they did with Vista, it's still a bitch to deal with, but they went out on a limb and tried to make programs behave properly. It's funny, if they hadn't done anything, people would have complained about the lack of security. They try to make apps behave like they do in other OS versions, and they get chastised endlessly. Hopefully you are correct and most widely used apps will be compatible with Windows 7. I didn't have any big issues with Vista, but many of utilities (A lot of it FOSS) I need to do my job didn't work under Vista.

    3. Re:Do these get better just because of time? by lorenlal · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well done.

      But - You could see Vista as MS finally paying the piper for the insecurity that was MS-DOS, Windows 3, 95, 98, ME... And then still not enforcing any sort of security in 2000 and XP.

      It all depends on what your angle is I guess. Vista finally made people annoyed enough that software writers had to actually think about running software in a moderately secure context... In that regard, it was a good thing. I might not particularly love the way MS handled it (say, compared to Mac OS), but it was still a step in the right direction.

      If the Windows user base can finally be trained to run in a standard user mode, with proper mechanisms to perform administrative tasks, we'll all be better for it... and I'll give a lot of credit to the *nix communities for really pushing this need for all those years. A lot of us might hate MS for various reasons, but if they really can put out a better product, good for them.

    4. Re:Do these get better just because of time? by Koiu+Lpoi · · Score: 1

      I'll agree with you on the Mojave point - a brand-spanking-new Vista installation runs GREAT. It feels really fast, and looks nice. However, for me (over several installs of Vista), it becomes slower and more unstable, faster and more completely than XP or 2000 ever did. After having the install for 3 months, startup time and overall performance just went down the tubes, and the same thing happened the next reformats. So, yeah, a new install is GREAT. If only it stayed that way.

    5. Re:Do these get better just because of time? by rastilin · · Score: 1

      It's funny, if they hadn't done anything, people would have complained about the lack of security. They try to make apps behave like they do in other OS versions, and they get chastised endlessly

      Two points...

      1. It's not the same people complaining in both cases, different groups have different and conflicting goals.
      2. Microsoft doesn't make software for other OS versions, they make WINDOWS, they have no reason to mimic others just "because".

      But here's what I don't get. Why didn't vista include a form of overlays? Something that allowed an app to "write" to it's folder or wherever; but that change only applied to that user account and not system wide. So an app could change a system file, but the OS would still read the original file and the app would read the changed version.

      --
      How do you kill that which has no life?
    6. Re:Do these get better just because of time? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vista IS a failure. We are a very large beta site and even we didn't roll it out into our standard image. Yes, it was that bad.

    7. Re:Do these get better just because of time? by Anpheus · · Score: 1

      I think because no other OS really supports that either. I think that sort of thing would have been a feature of a database filesystem, because what you're talking about is essentially a database view that takes some original data + user's own data and creates a new listing from it.

      Managing that on disk is profoundly more complex than simply writing a few SQL queries though.

    8. Re:Do these get better just because of time? by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Vista is a lot like ME - a transitional stage where you have both the old and new stuff side by side, with just enough of each to make it crap.

      Take how they changed the filesystem layout and had shortcuts for all the old XP directories, or introduced annoying UAC messages when programs tried to do nasty things like adding start-up items that was common in XP, for example.

      Hopefully there will be none of this in Windows 7. Anything that hasn't learnt to do things the right way in Vista by now will just stop working, like a lot of stuff did going from 98/ME to XP. That's a good thing.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    9. Re:Do these get better just because of time? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People want cheaper machines, netbooks and the like. Vista jacked the system-requirements up dramatically over XP. Frankly, Vista missed the mark.

      Vista shines only on the high-end. Vista is a failure because that's not what people are buying. Win 7 will be Vista for the low-end. It has lower system requirements, and support for the touch interfaces that will be so important in smaller form factors going forward.

    10. Re:Do these get better just because of time? by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      But on the other hand if your monopoly is based upon tying the IT illiterate into your system then they are going to expect their stuff to run.

      Sure they could upgrade everything (printers, old software, etc) and it probably will run fine but maybe they should tell users what the real cost of upgrading to Vista will be.

      I'm all for making people upgrade (getting rid of IE6 forever would be great) but you do have to make them aware of that and don't be surprised if most of them don't want to spend additional hundreds of dollars to get what they have no in XP but with a different GUI.

    11. Re:Do these get better just because of time? by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      I might not particularly love the way MS handled it (say, compared to Mac OS)

      Not sure I can agree with you on this one. I can still play some DOS-based games games on Vista, never mind running older programs and, in many cases, even drivers (Vista will quite happily run most XP drivers if you load them using Compatibility mode).

      Periodic application crashes sound annoying as hell - I've not faced any on my personal system, but my father has when trying to use a really outdated and rather kludgey piece of navigation software (that installed a bunch of drivers for no reason I could discern). Apple doesn't want that flavor of annoying, so they just say "it can't be done" and block out most oudated Mac software. Unfortunately, this means that some people I know are tied to using 10.2 or 10.3 on PPC because their older Mac OS software and even early OS X software will not run on Tiger or Leopard, let alone on x86.

      By comparison, I regularly play StarCraft (now just over 10 years old) on Vista using my original install disc. Backward compatibility FTW.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    12. Re:Do these get better just because of time? by Splintax · · Score: 1

      I've been running this Vista installation for over a year now and it's still just as snappy and stable as the day I installed it. Your anecdotal evidence doesn't really mean anything. (Neither does mine.)

    13. Re:Do these get better just because of time? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      The "drivers" are a fundamental part of the operating system both by the dictionary definition and the "hard drive is da beige box so solitaire, web browser etc is part of the OS" definition. Now while Microsoft have outsourced most of that but they are still responsible for defining how the drivers work and for certifying drivers that do not work properly. It really doesn't matter who the blame is pointed at if Microsoft cannot deliver a stable system for the machine - you have to either use different parts or use something else. It's just like linux in 1994 really, having to pick the hardware to be compatable with the OS.

    14. Re:Do these get better just because of time? by Farmer+Pete · · Score: 1

      2. Microsoft doesn't make software for other OS versions, they make WINDOWS, they have no reason to mimic others just "because".

      They aren't mimicking others for no reason, they are mimicking others because it makes sense from a security standpoint to limit users to their own profile as far as security goes. They shouldn't be writing data to the Program Files folder (except for initial installs), they should write data to their profile. They shouldn't write data to the local machine registry hive, they should only write data to the current user registry hive. It's not rocket science, but anyone who knows how applications interact with the file system and the registry would agree that making things more profile centric will increase security, and the apps should for the most part be able to handle it.

    15. Re:Do these get better just because of time? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're smokin' some serious MSFT dubie.

      Issues with Vista:
      1) Network drivers work then don't work after reboots.
      2) Sound card issues with just about every system I've installed it on. Often the "latest" drivers do not work, and often the sound goes choppy.
      3) Can't kill processes via task manager (when Firefox dies I have to reboot)
      4) Major application compatibility problems with games
      5) Major performance hit vs XP
      6) DRM hell, nuff said.

      I love to develop software on Windows, and I'm a big fan of a number of Microsoft products, but Vista isn't one of them. There isn't a single new feature in that OS I could give a rip about.. in fact, I've gone back to using Windows 2000 for my kid's machines.

    16. Re:Do these get better just because of time? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope you do not check TVersity anytime soon. The first thing it says is: Please deactivate UAC, restart and install as administrator.

    17. Re:Do these get better just because of time? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But now three years have gone by, and many of those apps have been patched, become obsolete, or replaced with working alternatives. That means the remaining apps are now in an ideal position to work correctly in Windows 7. Is it possible that Windows 7 could be exactly the same crap as Vista, but because so much time has gone by it doesn't matter as much?

      Well, you're right on two points. Firstly, Windows 7 is the next iteration of Vista. If an older app doesn't run on Vista then it won't run on Windows 7 either. It's still not the "same crap" as Vista, but it is an evolutionary improvement over Vista.

      Secondly, there were a lot of applications in the earlier days of Vista that just didn't work. Much of that has been resolved. There were similar issues with device drivers as well, but most of that seems to be gone. When you get down to it, it looks like most of the frustration around application and device driver compatibility was related to the way that Vista was rewritten to be more secure that previous versions of Windows. People complain all the time about how insecure Windows is, and Microsoft made a legitimate effort to improve security. They said "we know this is going to break some of the compatibility with older applications, but it will be more secure so we'll just have to swallow the bitter pill." At some point a lot of the legacy crap had to be left behind. In that sense, Vista was probably doomed from the beginning as a transitional OS.

      I've been running Vista for a little over two years (bot 32-bit and 64-bit flavors) and haven't had any problems with application compatibility that didn't get resolved fairly quickly. Maybe it's because I take the time to research and read the fine print before jumping in with both feet, but I never really suffered from the driver compatibility issues that some people did.

      One of the biggest complaints about Vista in the past (and sometimes still today) is the amount of resources that the OS requires to run well. The problem with that is that most operating systems have higher system reuirements than their predecessors. I remember trying to run Windows XP RC2 on a 450 MHz Pentium III and it was much slower than Windows 2000. While the somewhat dated hardware that I was running when Vista went gold in November of 2005 would run Vista OK (2 GHz Athlon 64, 1GB RAM, nVidia 6800GS), it does run much better now on all of my current systems (ranging from a Netbook with 1.6GHz Atom and 1GB of RAM to a quad-core workstation with 8GB of RAM).

      I honestly believe that most of the "problems" around Vista from the early days were related to either incompatible software (which has largely been resolved) or inadequate hardware (which by now has largely been replaced).

    18. Re:Do these get better just because of time? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your kids will grow into a nice bunch of retards

    19. Re:Do these get better just because of time? by IchNiSan · · Score: 1

      I run Vista at home for my internet/gaming rig, UAC turned off, Aero turned off, on state of the art as of a year ago hardware, and everything seems peachy. I still despise Vista though.

      /rant ON
      Why do I despise Vista? Sometimes I have to support other people(family, friends, the guy down the hall whose work I depend on that doesn't have so good a relationship with IT). Why in the name of all that is Holy does microsoft have to screw around with things that work, that people know? Tell me, can you find the Mail widget in control panel using a 64bit version of Vista? It isn't on the "Main" screen of Control Panel where it f*cking should be. No, there is a "32bit Control Panel Widgets" button, buried in among all the other buttons, and you have to go there to find "Mail", what the f*ck? Why do they hide that? "Mail" is one of the Control Panel widgets that SHOULD BE ON THE MAIN PAGE!!111!!!!111!!! The first time I had to use it on 64 bit VISTA I looked like a complete idiot because I didn't anticipate that "Mail" shouldn't be on the main Control Panel page. Now I'm just pissed that I have to use an extra click to find it.

      Why the F*CK did they do this crap, it is just like Office 2007, changing things that work for no F*CKING REASON. That is just one example of things being moved for no reason. I could go on, but I have already wasted enough of my time.
      /rant OFF

  8. Shill me one more time!!! by mcnazar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Are Magazines/Tech review sites/Editorials real anymore or are they just industry backed reviews (aka advertisements)? Is advertisement driven content real journalism?

    I remember almost every tech journal I picked up a couple years ago reviewed Vista as the "New Coming". Yet, a year later these journals are bemoaning how Vista "sucks" (which it does btw).

    Excuse me for being cynical but I will take this review with a pinch of salt as other reports show that, at least benchmark wise, there is absolutely no difference between Vista and Windows 7.

    As for Windows 7 feeling "so much more responsive".. well, depends who is paying you to write that review innit?

    1. Re:Shill me one more time!!! by slugtastic · · Score: 2, Funny

      Hey, dont judge them. After all, in today's economic situation, they do need to get paid somehow.

    2. Re:Shill me one more time!!! by sdkit · · Score: 5, Informative

      Excuse me for being cynical but I will take this review with a pinch of salt as other reports show that, at least benchmark wise, there is absolutely no difference between Vista and Windows 7.

      There was one set of benchmarks that showed no improvement: http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/11/10/46TC-windows-7_1.html/. There was another set of benchmarks done on a later build that showed improvements: http://blogs.zdnet.com/hardware/?p=3182&page=1/.

      As for Windows 7 feeling "so much more responsive".. well, depends who is paying you to write that review innit?

      Cynicism, conspiracy and an ad hominem attacks all in one. You're going all the way to +5 insightful!

    3. Re:Shill me one more time!!! by ThePhilips · · Score: 1

      It was reported all over the net: under Windows 7 review program, bloggers and journalists received copy of Windows 7 - installed on new and quite good laptops. No precise date is set on when they have to return the lappies back to Redmond.

      --
      All hope abandon ye who enter here.
    4. Re:Shill me one more time!!! by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      These people download and install unofficial betas of Microsoft OSes, they have to be Windows enthusiasts

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    5. Re:Shill me one more time!!! by kingcool1432 · · Score: 1

      Are Magazines/Tech review sites/Editorials real anymore or are they just industry backed reviews (aka advertisements)? Is advertisement driven content real journalism?

      I remember almost every tech journal I picked up a couple years ago reviewed Vista as the "New Coming". Yet, a year later these journals are bemoaning how Vista "sucks" (which it does btw).

      Er. So? They're shills when they say it is awesome, but they speak the truth if they say it sucks later on. Because you know, Microsoft only pays them to gush about Betas.

      As for Windows 7 feeling "so much more responsive".. well, depends who is paying you to write that review innit?

      Check out http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/11/10/1522246&from=rss . Even though the article does look at the perceived increase in speed with one raised eyebrow, the comments in that article should be pretty insightful.

    6. Re:Shill me one more time!!! by mixmatch · · Score: 1

      This is new to you? Reviewers have been receiving PC hardware, Game Consoles, Games, and software for years now.

    7. Re:Shill me one more time!!! by ThePhilips · · Score: 1

      Compare previous PR "Vista Beta CD" with new PR "Windows 7 with free notebook." Using car analogy: to test new iPod dock, Apple started giving away BMWs.

      P.S. Also notice that no single review ever complained by installation process of Windows 7. With Vista number of glitches due to missing drivers was big.

      --
      All hope abandon ye who enter here.
    8. Re:Shill me one more time!!! by TheNetAvenger · · Score: 0

      Excuse me for being cynical but I will take this review with a pinch of salt as other reports show that, at least benchmark wise, there is absolutely no difference between Vista and Windows 7.

      This isn't being cynical, it is sticking your head in the sand and being stupid.

      The sites saying Win7 is good are the same sites, as you mention, that blasted Vista on performance when it was released. When Video drivers on Vista caught up to XP and surpassed them, the sites also reported this as well.

      Both are true...

      The biggest bitches about Vista have been performance and gaming performance and the breaking of drivers. Vista stability has always been better than XP, and Vista security is significantly ahead of XP as well. (Heck just look at MS's own security releases, Vista required far fewer than XP, and both of them had a factor of 20x less than Leopard. Firefox had more security updates than the entire Vista OS.)

      When performance of drivers matured (ATI and NVidia started from scratch because of the WDDM) and people got use to 1GB of RAM as baseline, Vista does exactly what was promised.

      Windows7 has features that give it a lighter footprint, less locks, and better scheduling - so it isn't going backwards compared to Vista, and of course it is going to look good with the maturity of the Vista drivers it is using that Vista RTM didn't get the luxury of having.

      So even knowing this, you find the reviews misleading because you want Windows7 to suck or are justing sticking your head in the sand and still hoping it will suck?

    9. Re:Shill me one more time!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      reports show that, at least benchmark wise, there is absolutely no difference between Vista and Windows 7.

      Comparing operating systems "benchmark wise" is retarded.

    10. Re:Shill me one more time!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've got news for you: Microsoft sent Vista out to reviewers two years ago on Acer Ferrari laptops.

    11. Re:Shill me one more time!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Firefox has more patches than the entire Vista OS, means what? What ignorent BS is this supposed to be?

      W7 is VistaSP2 so fucking what? People are still not going to go out and buy a boxed version no matter what you or MS says.

      Being a paid MS shill is just not what is used to be.

    12. Re:Shill me one more time!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Feeling more responsive" basically means the UI is much better. Your windows respond to your clicks faster, etc. I'm not aware of any benchmarks which measure the responsiveness of the windows shell. You really need to take those benchmarks with a grain of salt. Most people care about the core experience, not their netbook's farcry FPS.

      So when a benchmark still gets the same HD reads/writes on win 7 as vista, that doesn't mean it will take the same time to load the control panel, a new IE window, or word. MS is cleaning up thousands of those little hickups all through the UI to reduce memory footprint and smooth out the experience.

    13. Re:Shill me one more time!!! by TheNetAvenger · · Score: 1

      Vista SP2 is in beta, and is not Windows7.

      I don't get paid by MS nor even give a crap about Windows or whether you buy it or not.

      I was questioning the OP's dismissal of news sites for reporting something they didn't want to see or believe. PERIOD.

      Move along...

    14. Re:Shill me one more time!!! by MadUndergrad · · Score: 1

      What, you think Microsoft (or many other companies, but especially M$) wouldn't pay off reviewers to give good reviews? Jesus, what, were you born at 2PM this afternoon?

    15. Re:Shill me one more time!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well said! Most of these tired old hacks just want to be first up with a story about the latest and greatest thing. As they say, money talks and with journalism, BS certainly walks!

  9. This beta exceeds the quality of any other Micro.. by Locutus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "This beta exceeds the quality of any other Microsoft OS beta that I've handled."

    Is this person a politician because that is saying nothing.

    Too bad 2009 is going to be another year of hearing Microsoft lies and exaggerations regarding yet another Microsoft OS release. BFD, is what I say after 20 something years of the same junk year after year after year. I gave up when Windows 2000 came out and they started shoveling more user level stuff into the kernel and they never fixed the security system. That was in 1999, over 8 years ago and they still are trying to build an operating system worth a hill of beans. Well, it's all about marketing at MS so what you see in print is not what you get and never has.

    in 2009, I'll be wading through the MS marketing drivel for what's going on in the embedded, netbook, and MID areas with regards to the ARM Cortex chips and especially the A9 dual core versions. A8 is amazing on the performance front and power front. This should prove very interesting along with what Android, Ubuntu, and others do on these platforms.

    So long MSFT, 2009 is probably going to be another tough year of marketing against real solutions. And though you may have smashed the OLPC and dashed their plans of helping millions of children, they kicked off a resurrection of the light weight small form-factor device you just can't compete on. IMO.

    LoB

    --
    "Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
  10. No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by sleeponthemic · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Rather than wasting our time with a new GUI, I'd like to see Microsoft get the ball rolling on full, proper migration to 64 bit. Perhaps I'm a "power user" but for a sound designer, this 2 gig limit per app/~3.5 max feels more and more like 640 kb all over again.

    (Unfortunately, the existence/popularity of 32 bit windows precludes the vendors of software such as Cubase and the likes from actually doing a proper job of putting out 64 bit software).

    --
    I record my sleeptalking
    1. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by talz13 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Yes, I was disappointed when I heard that vista was going to have a 32 bit version. If microsoft wants to push the transition to 64 bit, they really need to make a 64 bit only version.

      Also, please drop the 6 editions and go back to home and pro. If you want windows in a developing country, either pay for it, download it, or make microsoft price it at what the local market will bear.

    2. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by cbraescu1 · · Score: 1

      but for a sound designer, this 2 gig limit per app/~3.5 max feels more and more like 640 kb all over again.

      You are more than right. Imagine that I am actually working with 1080p 4:2:2 uncompressed video...

      --
      Catalin Braescu
      Ofaly.com
    3. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by icebraining · · Score: 1

      Making a 64 bit only version wouldn't push people to switch, it would make many maintain the old OS instead of buying the new. You must realise that many people (myself included) still has CPUs which only support 32 bit.
      Now, if they're only released a 64 bit for OEM (forcing new computers to have support), that could help the switch.

      But I agree on the Home and Pro, but I doubt Microsoft will "return" to them.

    4. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by FictionPimp · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There is simply no way for them to do that without alienating TONS of business customers.

      Look at it this way, I work at a college, we have thousands of computers. Only maybe 100 of which replaced in the last year are able to support 64bit operating systems and those still only have 1 -2 gigs of ram. If they released 64bit only the chance that we would switch anytime in the next 7 years (which would be how long it is going to take on our 5 year amortization cycle) is zero. We would be forced to continue to use XP, or migrate to linux.

      I suppose vista could be an option in that case. However, our plan was to skip vista in the hopes that by the time Win7 was released many of our software vendors would have upgraded their applications to run properly on vista and windows 7. If microsoft released a 64bit only win7 then many of those vendors would probably skip fixing their 32bit apps to run on vista and thus require us to move to 64bit windows 7. Faced with such a huge cost in hardware to do that, I'm not sure what we would do.

    5. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by maird · · Score: 1

      Linux has an unfair advantage there (I for one am happy about it). Windows just isn't very portable - the original NT HAL portability notwithstanding. There are too many system calls - too much of the Windows SDK is in the kernel. I suspect the only way Microsoft can really have programmers migrate to 64 bit apps is to have parallel interfaces with different function names in the kernel (even more massive kernel and more maintenance); or parallel interface libraries with different names in user space (even more files and more maintenance) or shim libraries in user space. Only the last one is easy for developers but would run slower. Even then it's only easy if a developer can re-compile absolutely everything in their app or everything they can't compile is available as a 64 bit shim library. Given the amount of things that developers depend on (countless third party custom controls; ActiveX controls; libraries; etc) I see a migration of Windows apps to 64 bit happening tortuously slowly. I suppose .NET was always supposed to be the way out for Microsoft...

    6. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not Microsofts fault that someone like steinberg doesn't update their software to run properly on 64-bit...64-bit Vista runs great in my own opinion...(I run Nuendo, and it looks like they are FINALLY about to release a 64-bit final version...

    7. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by recoiledsnake · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Now, if they're only released a 64 bit for OEM (forcing new computers to have support), that could help the switch.

      Then we would have a headline on Slashdot shouting "MS forces 64bit down the throats of people" and stories about how poor grandmas are unable to run their 32bit drivers for knitting.

      --
      This space for rent.
    8. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by Geekner · · Score: 1

      They are actually working towards 64bit. Many new computers with 4+ gb of RAM have Vista 64bit by default.

      Microsoft made 64bit compatibility a requirement of the "Certified for Vista" logo. (Vista cert requirements, converted from .doc by google)

      Of course, that does not mean everyone offers 64bit software, but 64bit is quickly gaining marketshare. There's also the fact that most Linux distros have offered fully 64bit versions for years now, that's the benefit of open source.

    9. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by Constantine+XVI · · Score: 1

      Many new computers with 4+ gb of RAM have Vista 64bit by default.

      You do realize that 4+ GB of ram would be useless without 64-bit, right?

      --
      "I think an etch-a-sketch with an ethernet port would beat IE7 in web standards compliance."
    10. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by RonnyJ · · Score: 1

      The biggest incentive I had to switch to 64bit was the fact that, if I didn't, only ~3Gb of my memory would be used. I had no hardware/driver problems when I switched though.

      When 4Gb of memory becomes common, that's when I expect 64bit installs to also become common. Until then, computer builders will likely 'play it safe' and install 32bit.

    11. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by Geekner · · Score: 3, Informative

      That is the point, no manufacturers want to sell computers with 4gb of RAM without 64bit for fear of complaints or lawsuits. For a while many computers were shipped with 3gb of RAM, so they could stay in 32bit. Now they feel it is safe enough to offer 64bit without hurting their customer base.

    12. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by groman · · Score: 1

      This is not a reasonable argument. Nobody who has such an old CPU it doesn't support 64-bit has any business running Vista -- it will slower than a legless turtle stuck in a shoe(metric) and while Microsoft might stop selling Windows XP shortly, they certainly won't stop supporting it for quite a while. Microsoft should have not released 32-bit version of Vista.

    13. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      I think the BSA would either have a REALLY HUGE PAYDAY, or will be so overwhelmed that they give up.

      Mark my words, if Windows 7 sucks... XP piracy is going to go through the roof, and it's going to be legitimate businesses doing it this time around.

    14. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hate to say it, but Microsoft is really falling behind here. 32bit is dead and over. If you are still running on a 32bit platform, you will be using older software ... deal with it.

      Snow Leopard is coming out in a few months and will be a full 64 bit OS. Oh ya, and they will have 1 version. No ultimate version or other marketing crap.

      Microsoft really needs to wake up and drop support for anything pre-64bit. If they don't do it in Windows 8 (?), then they will fall behind greatly. Seriously, if you are still using an old DOS application for your accounting you need to either upgrade or purchase vmware. If you are still using software that hasn't been updated since Windows 2000 or earlier you should fall into the same category.

      Backwards compatibility is really hurting Microsoft and their OS. If they don't take action soon, they will be up shits creek without a paddle.

    15. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by _ivy_ivy_ · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why the heck can't they build a 32-bit subsystem on top of the 64-bit windows? I'll ignore the fact that Linux does this fairly seamlessly, and instead focus on the fact that this is exactly how MS made the jump from 16-bit to 32-bit. The fact that they did not do this with Vista is shocking. How on earth did they craft an operating system that uses 10x the resources of its predecessor, but appears to offer nothing in the way of new features, save for a security setup and UI that was state-of-the-art in the late 90s.

    16. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      This is not a reasonable argument. Nobody who has such an old CPU it doesn't support 64-bit has any business running Vista -- it will slower than a legless turtle stuck in a shoe(metric) and while Microsoft might stop selling Windows XP shortly, they certainly won't stop supporting it for quite a while. Microsoft should have not released 32-bit version of Vista.

      It's not the CPU that needs to be 64 bit. 64bit OSes cannot run 32 bit drivers for any hardware.

      --
      This space for rent.
    17. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by bhpaddock · · Score: 1

      There have been fully 64-bit versions of Windows for several years now. Microsoft is clearly leading the way with 64-bit adoption. Just go to Best Buy and look at all the new HP computers running 64-bit versions of Windows. Most buyers will have no idea, which is exactly the way it should be. Windows 7 includes improvements to help 64-bit adoption as well, such as including top-quality 64-bit codecs in the box for popular media formats, and reducing (virtually eliminating) the memory footprint overhead of a clean 64-bit install versus a clean 32-bit one.

      Contrast this with Apple who have announced "64-bit" as a killer new feature for 3 consecutive OS releases. Who knows, maybe Snow Leopard will actually be 64-bit at last.

    18. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by eharvill · · Score: 1

      Making a 64 bit only version wouldn't push people to switch, it would make many maintain the old OS instead of buying the new. You must realise that many people (myself included) still has CPUs which only support 32 bit.

      Umm. If you only have a 32 bit capable CPU, would you really want to run Vista? I guess that makes your CPU 4-6 years old at least? Personally I would not want to run Vista on anything older than 2 years old and 3GB+ of RAM minimum.

      --
      At night I drink myself to sleep and pretend I don't care that you're not here with me
    19. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by CaptKilljoy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      You mean likeWOW64?

      WoW64 (Windows-on-Windows 64-bit) is a subsystem of the Windows operating system that is capable of running 32-bit applications and is included on all 64-bit versions of Windows -- including Windows 2000 Limited Edition, Windows XP Professional x64 Edition, IA-64 and x64 versions of Windows Server 2003 and 64-bit versions of Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008.

    20. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by keeboo · · Score: 1

      Many new computers with 4+ gb of RAM have Vista 64bit by default.

      You do realize that 4+ GB of ram would be useless without 64-bit, right?

      That's bullshit. Please read about PAE.

    21. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've run Vista sp1 on a 32 bit proc without any problems...

    22. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      WTF? Who keeps writing this drivel and who keeps modding this up just because it sounds right and is anti-MS? I have been using Vista 64-bit since more than a year and it does have a 32 bit subsystem.

      --
      This space for rent.
    23. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by AbRASiON · · Score: 1

      Exactly, 32bit needs to die now, they are holding us all back by releasing a 32bit version of Vista, let alone their second chance to kill it, with Win 7.

      Idiots.

    24. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Why the heck can't they build a 32-bit subsystem on top of the 64-bit windows?

      They did. In fact, they did it in XP x64 and 2003 x64 already, Vista just inherited it. And yes, it runs all your 32-bit Windows apps fine. Even funnier is that it uses similar tricks to what Linux x64 distros did, such as defaulting to a 32-bit browser so that all plugins would work.

      By the way, the fact that you do not know this demonstrates that you've never ever actually used a 64-bit Windows, nor even read its feature specs. But nevermind - this is precisely why /. is fun...

    25. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by Technician · · Score: 1

      (Unfortunately, the existence/popularity of 32 bit windows precludes the vendors of software such as Cubase and the likes from actually doing a proper job of putting out 64 bit software).

      Have you tried Ubuntu Studio? It works for me.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    26. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by sleeponthemic · · Score: 1

      You mean likeWOW64?

      WoW64 (Windows-on-Windows 64-bit) is a subsystem of the Windows operating system that is capable of running 32-bit applications and is included on all 64-bit versions of Windows -- including Windows 2000 Limited Edition, Windows XP Professional x64 Edition, IA-64 and x64 versions of Windows Server 2003 and 64-bit versions of Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008.

      If that works as well as it is touted to, why did they bother releasing a 32 bit Vista? That's the problem. It's an admission of guilt.

      --
      I record my sleeptalking
    27. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by setagllib · · Score: 1

      Screw VMware, DOS apps run in dosbox. That's what it's for.

      --
      Sam ty sig.
    28. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because old 32-bit drivers won't run on vista 64...

    29. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > I suppose .NET was always supposed to be the way out for Microsoft... ... but .NET is catching on about as fast as IPv6.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    30. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by Richard+W.M.+Jones · · Score: 1

      That would mean that Windows 7 would be even less likely to run on all those Netbooks, since most of them are 32 bit.

      Rich.

    31. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rather than wasting our time with a new GUI, I'd like to see Microsoft get the ball rolling on full, proper migration to 64 bit. Perhaps I'm a "power user" but for a sound designer, this 2 gig limit per app/~3.5 max feels more and more like 640 kb all over again.

      Then install the 64-bit version of Vista. Then you don't have the "2 gig limit per app/~3.5 max" issue. You'll still be limited per app if you're running 32-bit software on top of the 64-bit OS, but I'm not sure what else you want Microsoft to do here. They produced a 64-bit version. They're requiring hardware vendors to produce drivers for the 64-bit version in order to get Vista logo certified. I (and millions of others) are running 64-bit Vista with no problems. It's on the application vendors to re-write their applications for a 64-bit OS. Those vendors who provide applications that require large amounts of memory have done so already or are working on 64-bit versions. The fact that they haven't released software that was written to handle large amounts of RAM is not Microsoft's fault.

      On the bright side, if you look in the big box stores lately you'll see a lot more computers and laptops being sold with 4-8GB of RAM and with 64-bit Vista pre-loaded. In the end the only thing that is going push the development of 64-bit applications is market penetration of 64-bit operating systems, and we're only starting to get there. Had Vista been a resounding success, I suspect that Windows 7 would have been 64-bit only. I believe that the original plan was to have Vista be the last 32-bit OS. But now since there is still a large installed base of Windows XP out there that is waiting for Windows 7, making the jump to a new OS and a 64-bit OS at the same time is more than a lot of companies want to deal with. So we get one more generation of 32-bit Windows. I suspect that over the lifetime of Windows 7 we will see the vast majority of deployments running the 64-bit version.

    32. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by CommentThingSucks · · Score: 1

      Nothing in the Windows SDK is "in the kernel." Applications do not call kernel functions, they call various subsystems that run on top of it. Windows already has a pure 64-bit kernel. When you run a 64-bit application, the 64-bit versions of the system DLLs (and it's those that eventually call kernel functions) is loaded into the process. No problems there.

      When you run a 32-bit program,Windows knows this and runs it in the 32-bit emulator. This is completely transparent to the application which only sees a 32-bit world. The emulator includes 32-bit versions of all the DLLs, and the application only deals with these. When these 32-bit DLLs attempt to call kernel functions, the emulator transparently passes it through a userspace thunking layer that converts everything to 64-bit before passing it to the kernel, and then does the same in reverse when it returns. This is pretty much the same as happens in Linux, except that Linux has a seperate set of system calls for 32-bit and does the thunking to 64-bit inside the kernel.

      The APIs are the same in 32-bit and 64-bit, and problems associated with porting to 64-bit lie elsewhere. One common thing is the use of assembly. Another the use of incorrect types for pointers (which causes problems when you pass something to an API call that is identical to the 32-bit version except that it expects a 64-bit pointer.) A third, like you point out, the use of third-party DLLs that are only available as 32-bit and can't be loaded into a 64-bit process.

    33. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      Look at it this way, I work at a college, we have thousands of computers. Only maybe 100 of which replaced in the last year are able to support 64bit operating systems and those still only have 1 -2 gigs of ram.

      And how many of those old machines were you really going to upgrade to a newer OS anyway? Windows has always been tied to new machines, plus a small percent of upgrades.

      If they released 64bit only the chance that we would switch anytime in the next 7 years (which would be how long it is going to take on our 5 year amortization cycle) is zero.

      Every other 64-bit OS on the planet manages 32-bit backward compatibility. Heck, OS X even runs non-native binaries! You should demand no less from Microsoft.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    34. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by FictionPimp · · Score: 1

      Two things. One we buy our licenses as a volume license from microsoft, not tied to computers. So when we upgrade to vista, we upgrade.

      Two, vista 32bit still has incompatibilities with software that runs fine on xp. If they can't even do that right do you trust them to do 64 to 32?

      Yes, we would not do a 100% shift, but if it's not greater then a few dozen computers it's not worth the shift at all.

    35. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      Two, vista 32bit still has incompatibilities with software that runs fine on xp. If they can't even do that right do you trust them to do 64 to 32?

      Well, I ended my post by saying that Microsoft should be held responsible for handling these transitions, especially since everyone else manages to.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    36. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On 64bit Windows you can give 32bit apps access to 4GB virtual memory by using editbin /LARGEADDRESSAWARE. It may not work for all 32bit apps (that's why its opt-in), but it has worked for all 32bit apps I have tested.

    37. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree... 6 versions of windows is stupid. Im actually kinda angry about 2 versions of xp for that matter.

      Have1 version for all end users $200, 1 version for servers $500, and be done with it.

    38. Re:No Idea what the techspecs are on this but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look at it this way, I work at a college, we have thousands of computers. Only maybe 100 of which replaced in the last year are able to support 64bit operating systems and those still only have 1 -2 gigs of ram. If they released 64bit only the chance that we would switch anytime in the next 7 years (which would be how long it is going to take on our 5 year amortization cycle) is zero. We would be forced to continue to use XP, or migrate to linux.

      64bit CPUs have been around since nearly forever (if you were smart and bought AMD Athlon64s). I want to say 2004... Hell, that's why a lot of us switched to AMD, because they came out with a 64bit CPU that wasn't a slowpoke at running 32bit. So we all future-proofed our purchases at a time when nobody was sure how fast we'd all switch to 64bit.

      Basically, it's your own damn fault for not buying 64bit hardware over the past 4 years.

      And that's if you ignore the issue that you're unlikely to put Windows7 on old hardware where the licenses are already paid for.

  11. Doesn't look finished to me by coryking · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The task bar needs quite a bit of work. I bet that is one part of the OS that will change quite a bit from Vista. Looks like it is still a work in progress because right now it looks boxy and ugly.

    It also looks like Aero wasn't turned on for these screen shots. Probably a driver thing. Vista without the glass doesn't look nearly as good.

    I think like Vista, this version will be a lot of little things that improve the OS not huge ones. Then you'll go back from Windows 7 to Vista and go "jeez... how did I live without this Windows 7 feature" just like when you go back to XP and get pissed how crappy the taskbar is, how "in your face" the windows were, how crappy the file dialogs were, how crappy taskman.exe was, or how generally insecure the default setup was. Vista is a huge improvement over XP but it is hard to describe what improved. Just a lot of little annoyances are gone or smoothed out. Windows 7 will probably be the same.

    And can I rant for a second? Look, I know why the ZDnet guys are doing this, but we live in Web version 2.0 these days and they could easily have made it so their gallery didn't require a complete page-load between images. But like I said, I know why they do require a page-load.

    1. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by aliquis · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Javascript = bad
      Letting me load screenshots in multiple tabs = good

    2. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by _xeno_ · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The task bar needs quite a bit of work. I bet that is one part of the OS that will change quite a bit from Vista. Looks like it is still a work in progress because right now it looks boxy and ugly.

      It also looks suspiciously like Mac OS X's Dock. Hmm, single icon per application, where I have I seen that before?...

      For further confirmation that this is Window's take on the Dock, take a peek at this screenshot. Hmm, "Unpin this program from the taskbar"... Seems a bit like dragging the application onto the Dock, thereby "pinning" it. (Although at least Window 7's little "launched border" is easier to see than the glowing dot on the Dock.)

      Of course, I'd have to use it to see if it actually works. Mac OS X's Dock works the way it does due to the way Mac handles applications - each application gets a single instance and has a single menu bar but can have multiple windows. Windows does it differently - each window is essentially its own application. So directly ripping off the Dock probably won't work.

      Still, it's nice to see that Microsoft's stance on innovation hasn't changed. :)

      Look, I know why the ZDnet guys are doing this, but we live in Web version 2.0 these days and they could easily have made it so their gallery didn't require a complete page-load between images.

      I don't - Slashdot seems to have found a way to load ads via Web 2.0 in the new discussion view; I'm sure ZDnet and their advertisers can come up with a way to rotate ads using Web 2.0 techniques...

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
    3. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      Of course, I'd have to use it to see if it actually works. Mac OS X's Dock works the way it does due to the way Mac handles applications - each application gets a single instance and has a single menu bar but can have multiple windows. Windows does it differently - each window is essentially its own application. So directly ripping off the Dock probably won't work.

      Is that single window per application, unless its Excel where its single window per document but closing one takes them all down? Now that's innovative design :-)

    4. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by roc97007 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      > And can I rant for a second?

      Certainly. May I?

      Who amongst non-geeks really cares what the desktop looks like? Am I the only one who thinks that perhaps we've lost sight of what an operating system is for? I really don't expect my desktop to look and operate like Myst. I expect an OS to be a robust, secure, program loader and a robust, cohesive collection of resources that applications use. Yes, I know I used "robust" twice. It's important.

      The desktop is a way to start and manipulate applications. It is not an end in itself. It shouldn't suck the life out of the machine for the sake of pretty graphics.

      And this Linux desktop vs Windows desktop thing totally misses the point. Yes, I played with Ubuntu's cute rubber windows for awhile, and then I turned all those features the hell off. What a waste of resources.

      I think it comes down to why one buys a computer in the first place. Is it to do actual work, or to play with the pretty jellyfish? I think that if pressed, most people who make their living on computers would admit that all the cuteness is at best a distraction.

      I mean, from a technical standpoint, the design and implementation of cutting-edge desktop presentation is interesting, don't get me wrong. But on a day to day basis, would you really sacrifice the majority of your computer resources just for presentation? Amongst other things, that doesn't seem very Green to me.

      And don't even start with "let's all go back to the command line". Office 2000 was a huge increase in efficiency over vi/troff and I'm never going to go back. But Office 2007 is just Office, only annoying. We've reached a point of diminishing returns. Until there's a significant Xerox-PARC-grade paradigm shift, we're just rearranging the furniture. And each remodel significantly increases clutter and expense.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    5. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by recoiledsnake · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The reason OSes strive to look good is the same reason you paint the walls in your house, or wash your car, or drive around in good looking cars instead of metallic unpainted cubes. The experience does matter to some degree.

      --
      This space for rent.
    6. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by Archimonde · · Score: 1

      The task bar needs quite a bit of work. I bet that is one part of the OS that will change quite a bit from Vista. Looks like it is still a work in progress because right now it looks boxy and ugly.

      Actually, the default appearance of the task bar is just a little better than horrible. Those huge icons are frankly unusable. But good news is that you can easily configure the task bar (task bar->properties) to have the *same* layout as in vista/xp. Moreover, you can keep the new transparency of the taskbar (I personally don't like it because it is distracting when you have maximized windows) and at the same time get that cool mouse tracking effect and other extras (like taskbar button coloring, group mini-preview etc).

      I'm just surprised how few reviewers could miss that setting.

      --
      Trolls are like broken clocks. They show the truth two times a day. The rest of the day they talk nonsense.
    7. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by AlexMax2742 · · Score: 1

      The same thing that gives you rubber windows in Ubuntu gives me a desktop I can zoom in on and whatever Compiz calls the expose ripoff, which is a really nice alternative to alt-tab.

      So yeah, not all eye-candy is useless.

      --
      I'm the guy with the unpopular opinion
    8. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      Thaaaaat's what this thread needed -- a car analogy.

      Really? I paint the walls of my house to avoid wear and tear on the wood beneath. I wash my car (or, actually, the car wash machine washes it) to avoid wear and tear on the paint which is there to protect the metal beneath. Metallic unpainted cars are impractical because the the metal doesn't stand up to the elements. Except if it's stainless steel, and then you have a DeLorean, which was considered very stylish in it's day, despite (or because of?) it's uncomplicated, unadorned appearance.

      Look at higher end cars -- the kind businesspeople drive -- what do you see? Clean, uncomplicated lines in subdued colors. What do car-geeks and ricebois drive? Garish, brightly colored, highly customized cars with lots of decals and impractical gadgets.

      I guess what I'm saying is that I'm not convinced that the non-geek experience is about eye candy.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    9. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by pdusen · · Score: 1

      It also looks suspiciously like Mac OS X's Dock. Hmm, single icon per application, where I have I seen that before?...

      Quick Launch bar, circa Windows 98?

    10. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      And this lack of care for your environment may cause trouble getting dates, or throwing good parties. A nice atmosphere to work or play in helps a lot of social endeavors. It can be massively overdone, to the point where the eye candy intrudes on safety, precious resources, or usability. That's what Vista did, and I'm afraid it's what a lot of Gnome and KDE eye candy does.

      For example, what do hockey moms (who do a lot more useful car driving than almost any geek) drive? Oversized, overpowered cars that don't blink under the load, and don't mind getting mud all over the back seat from a bunch of muddy players coming back from spring practice.

    11. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amongst other things, that doesn't seem very Green to me.

      Enough with the "green" nonsense! You hipster sheep do nothing but bleat "green, green, green" because that buzzword has been implanted into you.

    12. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by Archangel_Azazel · · Score: 1

      --Vista without the glass doesn't look nearly as good.--

      --The task bar needs quite a bit of work--

      --"...how crappy the taskbar is, how "in your face" the windows were, how crappy the file dialogs were, how crappy taskman.exe was, or how generally insecure the default setup was"--

      In reverse :
      If you don't know how to set up your computer, ask someone who does know. Please don't beg for the Dilbert OS. You know, with one GIANT red button that they're nice enough to push at the factory for you?

      I'm not sure why taskman.exe was "crappy" or wtf you're talking about with the "crappy file dialogs"

      How are the windows "in your face"?

      I just had my first real run in with winblows vista this morning (have been avoiding it for as long as possible now.)and I have a few questions :

      1.) Why in the ever loving fuck would you need PERMISSION to move a file from one directory to another?

      2.) Why is it asking me if it's cool to save the changes...TO A PROPERTY SHEET...when I haven't changed ANYTHING at all?

      I haven't heard a single reason yet why I should switch to Vista.

      -my decent (AMD 1.4Ghz, 512 DDR2 RAM, decent vid card) computer won't even get NEAR IT.

      -I have yet to read about ANY 'improvements' that didn't involve that bloody "areo" interface or how "ooo shinyprettylookitthat!" it is.

      --
      Your mind is like a parachute. It works best when it's been opened.
    13. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by ascari · · Score: 1

      Tsk, tsk. Couldn't afford an iPhone, huh?

    14. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by rastos1 · · Score: 1

      Who amongst non-geeks really cares what the desktop looks like?

      For sure I care what the window manager allows me to do in KDE as opposed to Windows. Things like "sloppy focus", raising windows on focus, copy&paste by selecting and clicking middle mouse button, multiple desktops, resizing window only vertically or only horizontally ... On Linux this is not strictly part of OS (as in "the kernel"). Some of that can be considered part of OS as in "kernel + basic software". On Windows the distinction is not so clear and those features would be much closer to "being part of OS" - and yes, they do matter. May be not for secretary but for power users - certainly.

    15. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by _xeno_ · · Score: 1

      No, not at all the same. The Dock combines those "quick launch" style icons with their window icons - which is exactly what this new Windows 7 Task Bar appears to be doing. So after launching an application, the icon becomes the window/application icon - clicking on it again doesn't launch a new copy of the application like the Quick Launch bar does, it brings the current instance of the application to the front. (Sadly, the screenshots never really revealed if that's actually what it's doing. But it sure looks like that's the plan.)

      Which isn't to say that ripping off the Dock is necessarily a bad idea if they add in the feature where the Dock lets you know that it's actually launching the application you clicked on, rather than the old Quick Launch behavior of giving absolutely no indication that it's launching the application and not completely ignoring you...

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
    16. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bu-but I like pretty jellyfish! :(

    17. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      If it's not useless, it's not eye-candy.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    18. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      Most likely, the images were taken as VMWare snapshots, and since you can't do Aero on VMWare, that's why there's no glass.

    19. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1, Informative

      Ahh yes, typical Mac fanboi "They copied Mac" reaction.

      This funcionality hasn't changed since Windows 98. Before the Dock existed. It just looks different because of the theming. It's just the same old standard quicklaunch bar.

    20. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      My company offers the 3G iphone as a company phone. I turned it down. The interface is ultra-slick, but the phone won't reliably make calls. But that is another story, covered elsewhere.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    21. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      This would be the difference between a sound design and
      good maintance practices versus having a guady Vegas-style
      neon monstrosity in your front lawn.

              Unfortunately, most consumers don't know the difference.

              Thus the success of Vegas...

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    22. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by old_kennyp · · Score: 1

      Here Here At last someone that thinks like I do First Thing I do on any machine is to set the OS them to "Windows Classic" and disable themes Just doing this alone makes Vista usable Windows 200 was the cleanest interface yet from MS. I also do the Ubuntu turn of Compiz as well for the same reason you mention Ken

    23. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The software plus services approach of the next office wave with the webapp versions of word, etc isn't a big enough paradigm shift for you? You make it sound like the Office org has stopped listening to their customers. There's value and innovation to come. People have been saying we've hit the the point of diminishing returns as long as I can remember, before word processors were even written with GUIs. That point is still is a long way out.

    24. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by _xeno_ · · Score: 1

      Look again - it's changing for Windows 7. Sadly it's hard to say exactly how it works based on nothing but screenshots, but there are enough to know that it's not the old Quick Launch bar. In the old Quick Launch bar, clicking on an icon multiple times would launch multiple copies of the application. From the looks of the new bar, they've combined the little icon with the "application window group" idea from XP. So each application gets one icon on the task bar, and that icon can be used to pull up individual windows from that application. (Like the existing "application window group" in XP.) I'd guess that clicking on it again brings the running application to the front and doesn't launch a new instance.

      The best evidence that it's how it works is from the few screenshots where they actually launch one of the three applications on the left. Instead of popping up a new window icon to the right like in older Windows, it changes in to look exactly like the window icons for the front-most window that have been shown in the task bar in previous screen shots.

      This is pretty much exactly how the Dock works - assuming, of course, that it does in fact work like the Dock works. It certainly looks like it does, but since I haven't had a chance to actually use Windows 7, I can't say for certain it really does.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
    25. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      It also looks suspiciously like Mac OS X's Dock. Hmm, single icon per application, where I have I seen that before?...

      Yep, it's essentially Dock. They've demoed it on the PDC, and that's what it looks like - search for "PDC Windows 7" on YouTube, should be easy to find.

      Of course, I'd have to use it to see if it actually works. Mac OS X's Dock works the way it does due to the way Mac handles applications - each application gets a single instance and has a single menu bar but can have multiple windows. Windows does it differently - each window is essentially its own application. So directly ripping off the Dock probably won't work.

      They simply stack all windows of a single application into a single icon on the taskbar/Dock. It's actually visible because the icon will then become a stack of icons. You can click on that to expand the popup with actual windows (with preview etc). They also provide API so that applications can register their own "internal" windows (e.g. browser tabs) in that list, when it makes sense, and add additional items to the context menu of the taskbar icon. With all that, you probably won't be surprised to find out that there are some Expose-like developments for the task switcher, as well :)

      On the whole, though, I like what I've seen so far. I always considered the dock model more convenient in practice than the taskbar, and they aren't removing the Start menu, either, so you can still shove all the rarely used stuff there, not cluttering the taskbar...

    26. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by oiron · · Score: 1

      1.4 GHz and 512 MB RAM? You're not doing enough for the treadmill, bro... That's why you should go with Vista - to keep the marketing folks in their jobs... ;-)

    27. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      So wait, its that annoying grouping thing from Windows XP?

      Damn that thing is annoying. Then again, they've taken away the advantage of having it ungrouped by removing the title.

      [sarcasm] Thank god for Microsoft innovation! [/sarcasm]

    28. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      The only amazing feature of XP was that the damn thing didn't crash every 10 minutes.

    29. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1
      I expect an OS to be a robust, secure, program loader and a robust, cohesive collection of resources that applications use. Yes, I know I used "robust" twice. It's important.

      If you want those features, you have gone to the wrong place! You should be using FreeBSD and not buying MS products! Dont you ever read the label?

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    30. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      So wait, its that annoying grouping thing from Windows XP?

      Pretty much yes, with revamped UI. Here's the screenie of how it looks now (it may not be immediately obvious, but the guy just clicked on an IE icon on the taskbar). Though, as I understand, the flashy preview stuff can be turned off.

    31. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      I currently have nine machines powered up at home, two Linux servers (with scsi raid) one G4 Mac (for daughter's homework) one Ubuntu desktop (mine), one Linspire laptop (daughter's) two XP laptops, one XP workstation, and the curse of my existence, a Windows Media Center. I use Windows where and when I have to, because I don't believe in rejecting an application just because I don't happen to like the OS under which it runs. But I don't have to like it. And Microsoft can have my XP install disks when they pry them from my cold, dead hands.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    32. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Page loads between images is a GOOD thing. I, for one, like easy access to bookmark/share specific images, for one quick example. There are uncountable more reasons.

    33. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1.) Why in the ever loving fuck would you need PERMISSION to move a file from one directory to another?

      Wow, someone's stuck in a Windows 95 mentality. This is what happens when you don't run as the administrator by default, and have sane filesystem permissions. Turn UAC off if you don't like it.

      Perhaps you should spend a little more time with Vista before criticizing it - otherwise, you're just as poorly-informed as the rest of the Slashbots who will happily slag off Vista and everything about it as soon as they're given the opportunity, even though they've never used it and approached it looking for things to complain about.

    34. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      > The software plus services approach of the next office wave with the webapp versions of word, etc isn't a big enough paradigm shift for you?

      Gee, that takes me back. I remember back in the nineties when ASP meant Application Service Provider. I haven't thought about SaaS in probably a decade.

      Hmm? Oh, just reminiscing. To answer your question, no.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    35. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by theantipop · · Score: 1

      You mention a waste of resources, but I can scarcely recall any business or work application in the last 5 years that has truly taxed the hardware. There are some notable exceptions depending on your field, but the truth is there are a lot of resources to "waste".

    36. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by nicolas.kassis · · Score: 1
    37. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      Aaah, well that's actually alright. Thanks for explaining that.

    38. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by Daengbo · · Score: 1

      Video I made for you: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhQtOqsXuXw

      You are right that the behavior is very dock-like, but Mac isn't the only desktop environment to use this model.

      In the video above, you can see that the "quicklaunch" icons turn into "taskbar" icons once the application is launched, no longer launching a new instance (I had to right-click to launch a new IE window). Applications with multiple windows hide them all under one icon. No window previews are in the video because the VM didn't support acceleration.

    39. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by CommentThingSucks · · Score: 1

      That's exactly how it works. If you turn on text labels it becomes more apparent as the icon morphs into a full taskbar button.

      If you want to launch a new instance you can either middle click on the button or bring up the context menu by right clicking or left clicking and dragging up (this also lets you open frequent/recent files or whatever the author has decided to put in the menu with a single click. You simply keep the left mouse button depressed until you're over the item and then let go.) You can also rearrange the buttons.

      It is certainly inspired by OS X and unrelated to the old quick launch bar, although you can still choose to make a seperate toolbar for launching programs. Pinning them to the taskbar itself is optional and you don't have to do it if you don't like it.

    40. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Who amongst non-geeks really cares what the desktop looks like?

      Probably most people, actually. Apple understands this; this is why everything they make is sleek and pretty. Whether it's the best at doing what it needs to do is almost irrelevant -- it just has to be good enough as long as it looks nice. Microsoft is starting to understand this too.

      I think it comes down to why one buys a computer in the first place. Is it to do actual work, or to play with the pretty jellyfish?

      Jellyfish.

    41. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      Yes, but, there is a difference between "sleek and pretty" and "busy and complicated". In fact, they're pretty much opposites.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    42. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by losfromla · · Score: 1

      Yeah, because 3 125 lb kids are really going to load up a Honda Accord/Ford Festiva/Hyundai Excel. These soccer/hockey moms don't mind mud in the backseat? Is that why the heated leather seats and shag carpet interiors? No way pal, those things are to make up for their lack of penis. It makes them think that they are as strong as a guy. Let them flat a tire and then see how well they handle their humongous vehicle. I say you should not drive anything that you can't push for 25 yards on a flat road. Back to the point of the discussion, your analogy helped make the opposite of what I think your point was. Or maybe I have a twisted perspective because I live in Southern California?

      --
      Only I can judge you.
    43. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by offrdbandit · · Score: 1

      Given the vast capabilities of modern systems, desktop environments are not sapping the "majority of your computer resources"... That's just silly. To counter your insistence that "eye candy" is of no use, let me ask a question: what type of chair do you sit in when you are working at your machine? You probably have a fairly nicely padded (possibly leather) office type chair. Why? Wouldn't a wooden stool or a box do just as well? Wouldn't a more simple object to sit on require far fewer resources? One would choose the comfortable chair because the comfort and usability improve overall productivity. Desktop environment "eye candy" can do the same thing. I'm not saying all eye candy is a great thing, and I honestly used to think that minimalism was the best route.

    44. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      It sounds like Southern California has confused you. Where I'm from, 'hockey moms' have to get through muddy roads to get to the spring training rinks, the kids are sweaty and filthy and sometimes bloody from their workouts, the moms are out at ridiculously early hours to get the kids to practice, and they often have 5 kids and a storage space full of heavy hockey armor, including goals, stuffed in the back and on the roof. I've seen at least one mom simply hose out her back seats and trunk after her chunk of the team clambered out of her vehicle, it was so messy in there.

      SUV's are not "humongous" for their needs, they're shorter and easier to park than trucks, safer for 4 or more passengers than a pickup truck, and they handle a lot better on the nastier roads than the station wagons of my youth. I've got no grief with these women, and the dads, who do this sort of work for their kids: they probably have enough penis jack up that car without a handle, after that kind of work every week.

    45. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      Then... why is it that the first thing people turn off if they're having performance problems are the special effects? Did you read the other article in this thread about the implementation of Aero pixel shading vs Mac pixel shading, and how one works on legacy video cards and the other needs very high end cards to render at non-glacial speeds? (Leaving to the student to guess which is which.) Apple's latest operating system gives acceptable performance on 2001 hardware, demonstrating that it can actually be done.

      I do have a leather chair at home. It has a height adjustment and that's it. It's fairly comfortable.

      At work I have one of those newfangled chairs with four levers sticking out the bottom and a two buttons on each handrest (height and tilt) and a dial for lumbar and a dial for back position and a dial for armrest width. I've spent all day trying to figure out how to adjust it, and it still makes my back hurt. For instance, for as ergonomic as it purports to be, it won't adjust high enough to be comfortable. Even with it all the way up I fell like I'm sitting in a subcompact. I've had the company ergo specialist come by and adjust it and it still makes my back hurt. I'm thinking of bringing in my simple, one-adjustment chair from home.

      No, you don't have to sit on a wooden stool, and you don't have to type TROFF into a command line. We've already discussed that. But at some point you reach a level where all the really useful features have already been implemented, and trying to make the next version cooler just uses up resources to no good purpose. I had to upgrade from ME to XP because ME clearly sucked. XP is good enough. Years later, XP is still good enough. Can't I just get some work done?

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    46. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by csartanis · · Score: 1

      Office 2000 was a huge increase in efficiency over vi/troff

      Increase in formatting and adding flashy clipart and graphs to your document, sure. Actual creation and editing of content? No way!

    47. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      That is not up to the OS manufacturer to decide. In my case, spending a lot of time rendering video and manipulating raw camera images, the cpu and memory footprint of all processes unnecessary to that task is critical. Even when I'm not doing that, there are times when the OS can't seem to get out of it's own way -- right click on an icon, wait wait wait for some process to get swapped into memory and finally the menu comes up.

      Again, it comes down to what the PC is *for*. If you bought your PC to play with cool menu effects, your money might have been better spent with a lava lamp or a Tesla Plasma Ball.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    48. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by Allador · · Score: 1

      Why in the ever loving fuck would you need PERMISSION to move a file from one directory to another?

      Because the account you're running as doesnt have permissions to either the source or target of hte move? Seems pretty straightforward.

      Same reason why the bank requires permission to move money from another person's account to yours.

      You should not have access to other users on the machine's profiles, they may have personal stuff there.

      I have yet to read about ANY 'improvements' that didn't involve that bloody "areo" interface or how "ooo shinyprettylookitthat!" it is.

      As I've said about 400-million times here, go read about the technical improvements to Vista on wikipedia.

      Lots of improvements to the kernel, scheduler, io scheduler, default permissions, security, etc etc etc. They did some really neat stuff under the hood.

      So amongst other things, what you should notice quickly is how much longer Vista will run stably than XP would, as long as you arent stuck with some piece of crap with buggy drivers that you buy from Best Buy.

    49. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by Justin+Hopewell · · Score: 1

      I understand your rant, especially in regards to how Vista's performance is probably hindered by all the flashiness. But I think there is something to be said in regards to having a zen-like desktop environment. I understand why the Mac interface appeals to people, and its not all about just being hip and trendy. I plan on buying a Macbook fairly soon to complement my Windows machine. One I'll use for gaming and general internet use (PC), the other will be for music and video editing (Mac). I think there's a certain subconcsious state I like to be in when I work on my creative projects, and I just like the was Mac OS works and looks. It feels very modern, clean, and sterile. I don't get that feeling with Windows. And really, you can't expect Microsoft to stick with an old-looking interface and risk losing more marketshare to Apple. The mainstream populace cares more about what's popular, not necessarily what's more functional or practical. How else could a business sell a plain white t-shirt with a Tommy Hilfiger logo for $50.00? Or an iPod for several hundred dollars for that matter? (someone literally just mentioned an iPod nano in my office after I typed this.) Eventually Apple is going to catch up with Microsoft once they've convinced enough people. If MS doesn't have the right look by then, they're going to get passed up, whether the OS is better or not.

    50. Re:Doesn't look finished to me by cflee · · Score: 1

      Loading the rest of the page = more page impressions = revenue.

  12. Compare with XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Comparing Windows 7 to Vista is useless, at least to someone like me. I love XP, having never had any serious problems with it whatsoever. It's by far the most stable OS I have ever used. Tell (and prove to) me that Windows 7 is better than XP, and I will show great interest in switching. Tell me 7 is better than Vista, and you don't have a chance.

    1. Re:Compare with XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      good thing they dont care about your thoughts.

      in fact, all they care about is public perception, and the perception of tech blogs isnt the public perception.
      If it was, Apple would be dead in the water and Linux would rule on desktops.
      Apple and Microsoft would be dead in the water on mobile phones and android would rule them like the one ring.
      Apple would be dead on the PMP market and only fully open non drm music would sell.

      funny thing about tech blogs.

      they think they are way more important than they really are.

    2. Re:Compare with XP by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      I was just about to post it, thanks for beating me to it (read: Hey, I wanted that karma!).

      It feels a little like the new coke deal. We wanna switch the formula to something cheaper and people would notice the change, so we introduce something crappy, wait 'til everyone hates it, then come back with the "old formula" and have people praise it how much better it is than the crap we shoveled out the door in between.

      I don't care how Win7 compares to Vista. If it was worse, I'd lose any hope for MS, so it better be better than Vista! The key question is, how does it compare to XP? How does it compare to 2k? Those were decent, useable versions that performed pretty well. And I do expect Win7 to be better or offer me something I don't get from neither XP nor 2k, or, again, I see no reason to switch.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    3. Re:Compare with XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps you've never used Linux then? XP might be fairly stable, but saying it's by far the most stable just doesn't make sense when you consider all the other operating systems...

    4. Re:Compare with XP by plasmana · · Score: 1

      Here's a performance comparison. Seven beats XP in each of the tests: http://blogs.zdnet.com/hardware/?p=3187

    5. Re:Compare with XP by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      Actually Vista 64 has been far more stable than XP. I dont get BSODs in Vista.

      XP has the performance edge, but I do like Vista's new UI enhancements (function wise, not just the eye candy)

    6. Re:Compare with XP by Yaotzin · · Score: 1

      As far as I'm concerned, Vista is better than XP in pretty much everything. The exception would be performance but that is barely noticable if you have up to date hardware. So if Windows 7 is better than Vista, I'm pretty much sold.
      And praising XP for its stability? Then you obviously haven't used an up to date version of Vista. I know I've experienced far less BSODs and the like with Vista, and that includes the ones I had during the shitty first period of Vista's lifetime.

      --
      Error: No error occurred
    7. Re:Compare with XP by Grem135 · · Score: 1

      You sound like all the others that "has a friend of a friend" that hates Vista and has not even tried it themselves. I have used and loved XP since i got my Pre-release of XP Pro. I now have Vista Ultimate and Home premium on 3 machines and cant go back to XP. Hate having to work on my wifes XP Pro machine, strange how that works isn't it. So try it before you blast it and i dont meen a few clicks... but of course if you have a machine that barely runs XP... then upgrade or STFU

    8. Re:Compare with XP by Jack9 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I was of the same mind, till I tried OSX. Maybe you should try more OS's?

      --

      Often wrong but never in doubt.
      I am Jack9.
      Everyone knows me.
    9. Re:Compare with XP by Grem135 · · Score: 1

      had OSX Tiger on my AMD box dual booting with Vista ultimate, not bad but still like vista better

    10. Re:Compare with XP by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Can I ask then: what do you like about Vista? What's so good that you hate going back to XP?

      I use Vista, but maybe I'm just missing something. It's prettier. I'll give you that. Running the newest version of Vista with all the updates, I find it about as stable as XP (i.e. neither crashes on me very often).

      I guess if you really like the UI changes enough, you might be willing to pay to upgrade, but otherwise I can't think of much of a reason. Maybe Bitlocker for laptops or if you're really using Shadow Copy? Those are the only two features that I see as being particularly useful, but I don't really use them. Mostly, when I look at the proposition of upgrading to Vista, I see it as spending a couple hundred dollars for a prettier interface (kind of good) and a more restrictive activation process (very annoying).

      So that's the problem that I have with Vista. It's not that I think Vista is bad, but that I think it's not significantly better. And honestly, I feel the same way to some extent about Windows XP. Besides bug-fixes and such, I don't really see any features that have been added to Windows since Win2k that actually help me in any way. And that makes me pessimistic about Microsoft, because I think, "You give them several years to work on their flagship product, and this is the best they can do?"

    11. Re:Compare with XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've never understood anyone who brings up XP and BSOD. I think I've had a total of 2 or 3 BSOD on XP... ever.

    12. Re:Compare with XP by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Have you ever used Vista?

      In Vista, when your video card driver crashes (which happens to me all the time, shitty ATI drivers!), Vista can restart graphics on-the-fly without losing any of your work. It even works when 3D-heavy apps like World of Warcraft are running.

      That feature alone makes Vista more stable than XP on my computer. (Of course, ATI's XP drivers are better, but not that much better.)

    13. Re:Compare with XP by Grem135 · · Score: 1

      Its lots of small things that make vista nice. much better search feature, better 64bit than XP (2 of mine run vista 64) I never get BSOD. adn for some reason, about half my games run better than under XP, i really expected the oposite. but then Vista uses your system RAM better... ie it accually uses it unlike xp. I have 2 PCs that will not get upgraded to vista..they not "New" enough to see any benifits but my AMD 4200+ with 1.5 gig ram and SLI seems to like it and my quad core intel with 8 gig loves it. Im not saying eveyone should run out and get it, not all machines will do good with it. but then M$ claimed XP would run on 128meg ram and we all know how that went..I say 512 min for XP and 2gig for Vista (thought i have 1.5 in 1 machine and its fine)

    14. Re:Compare with XP by PenGun · · Score: 1

      Let me guess, you have some adequacy problems the software solves for you. I mean it is "love" right? mWhahaha.

      The only useful thing I found Vista could do was shrink it's self. That made it last nearly a week on my lappy that came with it. XP sits where it was although I don't seem to need it much. Slackware 12 does everything I need the lappy to do.

    15. Re:Compare with XP by earlymon · · Score: 1

      Besides bug-fixes and such, I don't really see any features that have been added to Windows since Win2k that actually help me in any way.

      FWIW, my 2 cents is that I recently helped a broke friend resurrect a PC with Win2k - and the networking config was terrible compared to XP. I don't know if that's a bug fix or feature, though - honestly.

      Mac Panther was sufficient, but I run Leopard. Win2k was sufficient, but I run XP and am interested in Win7. Why Leopard and why Win7? There are only 4 OS features I care about: speed, stability, security and ease-of-use (not necessarily in that order). Just about everything else is the Great Big So What for me, personally.

      --
      Pathological kinda promises Path + Logical - but instead, you get stuck with pathetic.
    16. Re:Compare with XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that must have worked exactly as intended...

    17. Re:Compare with XP by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I don't know. I've used every version of Windows since WFW 3.1, and though the UI was a little better in XP, Win2k was the last upgrade that I did in Windows where I said to myself, "Well this is really going to make things better!" In XP and Vista, the controls have all been moved around, and I'm not sure whether the organization is better or worse-- I think it mostly comes down to "what you're used to". If you're used to looking for a certain network setting in one place and it's not there, it's going to be frustrating.

      I used to hate Macs back in the 1990s, but I've used every version of OSX since 10.1. In some releases, the main features were speed and stability, while in others there were actual new features that are useful. To be honest, I don't use Expose or Spotlight that much, but I use the Dashboard and Time Machine. For whatever reason, I find Vista's sidebar and Shadow copy a lot less helpful even though they're pretty similar features.

      Obviously there's a little bit of "to each his own" going on here. Whether a feature is "useful" or "useless" depends somewhat on who is using it, how that person is using it, and what they're using it for. But really none of that is really dealing with the point I was trying to make.

      My point was that, if you look at the state of Windows, Linux, and OSX back in the year 2000, I think Windows 2000 was the best consumer/business desktop system available. Linux was hard to set up and use, and OSX barely existed. Now look at them today, and OSX and Linux are both great IMO. They've made vast improvements and continue to improve every day. Meanwhile, Microsoft has had all the resources in the world, and I'd say the improvement has been minimal. Both as an admin and as a user, there are very few improvements since Windows 2000 that actually make my life easier.

      Now that's just my opinion, and I'd be interested in anyone who can explain how features in Vista make their lives easier. However, when I look at the lack of progress (or what I perceive as a lack of progress), it puts a little bit of doubt into my mind about whether Microsoft will continue to be as successful as they've been. It seems to me like they need a drastic change in direction, and perhaps that they need to fire their current management.

    18. Re:Compare with XP by earlymon · · Score: 1

      Now look at them today, and OSX and Linux are both great IMO. They've made vast improvements and continue to improve every day. Meanwhile, Microsoft has had all the resources in the world, and I'd say the improvement has been minimal.

      I must say, I agree 100%.

      --
      Pathological kinda promises Path + Logical - but instead, you get stuck with pathetic.
    19. Re:Compare with XP by Grem135 · · Score: 1

      "the controls have all been moved around" In Vista just use search.. type in "printer" hit enter and it takes youj straight to the printer applet, type "notepad" enter, opens notepad. Itunes ect. no fumbleling around with the programs menu or tring to figure out where they moved to is needed. One thing i do have trouble with is IE7, fooken thing crashes, but then i use firefox anyway so no big deal to me.

    20. Re:Compare with XP by Yaotzin · · Score: 1

      Well I guess you've been lucky then, or perhaps careful. I've been less lucky and have had plenty of BSODs when running XP, so as far as I'm concerned, it's a valid source of worry.

      --
      Error: No error occurred
    21. Re:Compare with XP by Grem135 · · Score: 1

      I see you have some problem. I own lots of software that runs wonderful on Vista, cant get them for your beloved Linux (I used Mandrake back in the hard to configure days and Ubuntu gutsy gibbon most resently) I dont own a Mac, but i have run OSX on my AMD box, was fun but again, didnt have what i wanted to use everyday without a large finacial expense. I do still use XP pro on my archive machine and dont plan on changing it. I even have 3 unopened Win 98se discs.. you want to buy them? I even have office 5 if you really want older stuff, and win 3.1 to go with it. well enough of that. my Vista machine goes for months non stop with no troubles at all, does everyting i want and i dont have to worry that new programs wont run on it. If you are afraid to move forward to new products, you should not be using a computer... where change is the rule....

    22. Re:Compare with XP by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Geeze, my point wasn't that I can't find things, but that which order people prefer seems to be largely related to which one they're used to.

    23. Re:Compare with XP by atraintocry · · Score: 1

      If your metric for an upgraded OS is that it is even more XP-like, then obviously nothing is going to beat XP, and your dare is meaningless. Vista has plenty of new features that are worth looking at. I don't need to sell their product for them, but there are important improvements in IIS, DirectX, GUI, fonts, power management, searching, color management, input methods, and more.

      Of course, those features may not mean anything to you. Windows is no longer my primary platform for work, and they mean very little to me. In this case sticking with XP is a bad choice. But don't confuse a difference in priorities with a lack of value.

      It would seem that many people have found their perfect OS in Windows XP, but many of us were not so lucky.

    24. Re:Compare with XP by atraintocry · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I meant to say, "sticking with XP is not a bad choice".

  13. There is nothing wrong with it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just remember to wash your hands after you are done dear.

  14. List of changes between it and Vista plz. by DanWS6 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What are the improvements? Have they added in WinFS yet?

    1. Re:List of changes between it and Vista plz. by tomhudson · · Score: 5, Funny

      "What are the improvements? Have they added in WinFS yet?"

      They tried to - they're in the process of copying the files now ... the dialog box says "Copying files" and to please wait another 10.459 years for the operation to complete ...

    2. Re:List of changes between it and Vista plz. by Jugalator · · Score: 4, Informative

      Heh, WinFS... It's such an easy troll target... ;)

      The storage system (not its own file system) called "WinFS" was released as Beta 1, but later cancelled, with components of it ending up in SQL Server 2008. It was later assumed to be dead for good, but Ballmer said in late 2006 that it was still being worked on, although he was not clear on in which products it would end up in. For all we know, the team could be working with the SQL Server team now.

      This is among the last pieces of good actual info on this project:
      http://blogs.msdn.com/winfs/archive/2006/06/23/644706.aspx

      Windows 7 will not include WinFS, and it was never announced for it.

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    3. Re:List of changes between it and Vista plz. by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      WinFS was dropped from Vista like 4 years ago and the was was integrated into SQL Server. And it was never talked about again by MS. Where have you been?

      --
      This space for rent.
    4. Re:List of changes between it and Vista plz. by dvh.tosomja · · Score: 0

      Actually, Windows 7 is not better, but sucks less.

    5. Re:List of changes between it and Vista plz. by EXMSFT · · Score: 1

      The WinFS team WAS the SQL team, from the beginning.

      WinFS was a bad design from the get go, and no, it won't be in 7. The ideas behind WinFS were fundamentally flawed - you should be thankful that it isn't in there, and just hope for proper filesystem indexing and search.

    6. Re:List of changes between it and Vista plz. by Anpheus · · Score: 1

      No, the ideas aren't fundamentally flawed. There's an enormous advantage that you gain when you abstract out the filesystem in the manner of a database. And if based upon a minimal subset of SQL Server (there are embedded versions) then you gain ACID compliance right away. Every operation on your filesystem is a transaction that either fully succeeds or has no effect, etc.

      There -are- advantages to having a database supported filesystem (I would never call it 'database based', it's still sectors on a disk.) Don't disregard the idea because the implementation details were too complex for use quite yet. Let's face it, it's a monstrous task and an enormous change from the way most databases work.

    7. Re:List of changes between it and Vista plz. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're aware that Vista supports transactions, right?

    8. Re:List of changes between it and Vista plz. by bhpaddock · · Score: 1

      WinFS was not a user feature. It was an implementation detail, and for the purposes it tried to serve in the Longhorn days, it failed. The innovations on the server side live on in SQL Server, the .NET Entities Framework, etc. The innovations on the Winodws shell side live on in the Windows shell. Windows 7 includes the features that *would have* been built on WinFS. Libraries, metadata-based views, rich pivots and instant search filters (listing all the Authors that are valid for the current location or query, etc), among others. While the backing database isn't WinFS, it is a great deal lighter and faster. WinFS was a managed code behemoth which would have made Vista's performance and compatibility problems look like nothing at all.

    9. Re:List of changes between it and Vista plz. by WheezyJoe · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing from the "Ultimate" legend on many of the screenshots, the pricing structure hasn't changed. We can expect to wade through at least 3 differing releases with various capabilities turned on and off, while "Ultimate" is dangled over our heads for over $300.

      Windows also can't seem to shake the Windows 2000/95 desktop style. The style in XP seems like a thin skin painted over this 13-year-old design (read: hack). But I thought Vista offered a complete redesign of the display infrastructure. Instead, Vista surprised me that if you don't like Aero's color choices and over-sized widgets, you're only choice is to downgrade to the old Windows 2000 look, which is apparently still around for the ride. My guess is Windows 7 is the same?

      --
      Take it easy, Charlie, I've got an Angle...
    10. Re:List of changes between it and Vista plz. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are the improvements? Have they added in WinFS yet?

      Microsoft has basically decided that WinFS was a bad idea all around. There's something to be said for having a built-in database and uniform schemas for data, but all people really want is basic file storage. WinFS wasn't full baked.

    11. Re:List of changes between it and Vista plz. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know why people always bring up WinFS as a feature they want -- it was demonstrated to our .NET user group years before Vista was released, and it was terrible. It seemed pointless to everyone there.
      People seem to think it was new file system, but it was just a DB layer on top of NTFS. It reminded me of the Registry (which some at Microsoft admit was a mistake), but for file data.

    12. Re:List of changes between it and Vista plz. by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      The idea was massively flawed. It created a huge performance penalty for previously simple operations, such as a web proxy or the effective proxy of a simple browser web cache where a great deal of modern disk I/O occur, and destabilized the filesystems in ways likely to imperil data. There have been numerous attempts to create database structured filesytems, and they have _all_ suffered from these flaws and eventually been discarded for anything resembling normal software usage.

      Frankly, the hooks necessary to make filesystem operations atomic (which is admittedly a laudable goal) are not consistent with large filesystem operations (such as transferring video clips) or database operations that live on top of the filesystem (such as IIS). And the usefulness is so rare that the overhead and additional problems of the atomic operations locking out other operations is so large that it has never worked well.

      Filesystems, like most software, benefit from 'Keep It Simple, Stupid'. And because their operations are so low level, unnecessary features in the filesystem penalize the sytem even more heavily than elsewhere. The result, with WinFS, was years of wasted developer effort for an idea that actual engineers with filesystem experience (like me) warnted was a bad idea.

    13. Re:List of changes between it and Vista plz. by Curate · · Score: 1

      NTFS has always supported transactions at the metadata level, aka journalling. With Vista and later it now supports transactions of arbitrary series of file activities, as defined by an application. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TxF. So you see, you can still incorporate some aspects and qualities of a database system into a file system, without actually becoming a database system.

      Using a database to implement a file system is a fundamentally flawed idea, and here's why. A database system is designed to be very good at storing STRUCTURED information, including fast searching, updating, etc. A file system is designed to be good at storing arbitrary, unstructured information. Think about all the files on your hard drive. There is quite a variety there. Care to come up with schemas to describe them all? Care to update these schemas as they change? Add new schemas when you add new types of files to your hard drive? No, the file system should not need to know anything about the data in the files; they are arbitrary blobs. For fast searching of certain types of files, you can implement user-level indexers, which is exactly what happened with Windows Search, Google Desktop Search, etc. If you actually do have a ton of structured information that you need fast, concurrent, highly available, etc. access to, run a database! That's what they're for! Guess what, high-end databases can run either on top of an arbitrary file system, or they can just run directly on the "raw" volume -- this gives a few percentage points gain in performance usually.

      We don't need a merger of file systems and database systems. The two serve different purposes, and each should continue to develop independently so as to optimize for their intended purposes. Of course some of their needs will overlap, and where it makes sense, technologies will be shared.

    14. Re:List of changes between it and Vista plz. by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      Have they added in WinFS yet?

      What do you think WinFS is going to do for you ?

    15. Re:List of changes between it and Vista plz. by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      A few that I'm aware of, but that are mostly behind-the-scenes:

      • Kernel has been reorganized, modularized, and streamlined (you know this as MinWin, but what I describe above is pretty much all that is). Various performance improvements have come of this, though most are only relevant to enterprise systems.
      • Bootup initialization, along with hibernate and resume, have been parallelized and will take advantage of multiple cores.

      A few that will be useful to enterprises or anybody who needs the features:

      • BitLocker drive encryption has been improved; you can now encrypt removable drives, transfer them to other computers, and decrypt them (even on XP/Vista machines).It has also been better integrated into the UI.
      • Numerous group policy controls have been added.
      • Multi-touch is natively supported, any many features have been designed to aid in touch-based control of the system (such as enlarging buttons when a touchscreen is in use)

      A few more that nearly everybody will see:

      • UAC's default configuration no longer uses the secure desktop, and no longer prompts when elevating Microsoft-signed binaries. This results in fewer prompts overall, and those that get are seen being less of an interruption.
      • The taskbar and system tray are both being redesigned. Among other changes, you can now re-order icons
      • Gadgets are now integrated onto the desktop, removing the need for a separate (and slow-starting) sidebar process.
      • The interface for joining networks is much better designed, resembling that found on OS X
      • Paint, Calculator, and several other basic apps have been vastly improved
      • Changing display settings is easier to reach, and it auto-detects improperly configured displays and can correct them automatically
      • User-customizable themes, including everything from desktop backgrounds to icons to sound schemes, can now be easily created, copied, modified, and switched between.

      There are many others, but those are all that come to mind at present.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    16. Re:List of changes between it and Vista plz. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows 7 codename was Blackcomb. Hell yes, WinFS was announced to be included in codename Longhorn (Vista) then moved into codename Blackcomb (7) then cancelled.

  15. All the fun of a recession by igb · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Axioms:
    1. Consumers don't put a new OS on Wintel platforms, they buy a new system.
    2. Businesses don't spend money without some sort of justification.
    3. Moore's Law is now adding more cores and threads, not more mippage on a single task.
    4. Disks, RAM and other drivers of new equipment purchase are pretty much ``as much as you want for as little as you want''.
    5. Netbooks and small laptops are the current hot items.
    6. XBoxes and the like are providing gamers with an alternative to PCs
    7. The economy has tanked since Vista shipped.

    All that being the case, why on earth do we care about Windows 7? If Microsoft couldn't get people to migrate off XP with benign economic circumstance and ready availability of credit, why do we think it's going to happen this time?

    ian

    1. Re:All the fun of a recession by FudRucker · · Score: 1

      RE:why (what) do we think it's going to happen this time?

      more people will either keep eXPee, or grab a free Linux distro is what i think will happen, the tighter the budget the less people are willing to spend money on expensive luxury items like a new PC for personal use or retail copy of windows-7

      --
      Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
    2. Re:All the fun of a recession by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      The new system will come with Windows 7. Adding more cores and threads will make Windows 7 seem faster than a slower system on XP. Same with cheap RAM and disks. Windows 7 is supposed to be running really well on netbooks.

      --
      This space for rent.
    3. Re:All the fun of a recession by rpillala · · Score: 1

      It seems like the best thing they could do in these circumstances is to make Windows easier to pirate. Didn't Gates himself say something about how Windows has a much wider adoption in areas where it's easier to pirate? I'm sure more than a few people looking at a linux distribution would reconsider if the new windows was "free."

      --
      When the axe came to the forest, the trees said, "Look out - the handle was once one of us."
    4. Re:All the fun of a recession by gargletheape · · Score: 2, Funny

      The economy has tanked since Vista shipped.

      You think Vista caused that? I don't see any evidence, but somehow it seems plausible.

    5. Re:All the fun of a recession by buddyglass · · Score: 2, Interesting

      With Vista as my only option, my plan was to stick with XP as long as humanly possible. I have my own volume-licensed copy of XP Pro, so it's a somewhat realistic plan. If Windows 7 proves to be as high-quality as the pundits claim, that might just be enough to make me leave XP.

      As for the axioms, while they may be generally true, they're not universal:

      1. I've updated my desktop from Win2k to XP, my dad's desktop from Win98 to XP, and a friend's laptop from Win2k to XP. So it happens.
      2. Agreed. However, "XP going end-of-life" constitutes justification. Other possible justifications: "IE8 not supported on XP" or "Office 200x not supported on XP".
      3. Agreed. And Windows 7 provides better support for a high number of cores. So, if anything, the move towards parallelism is one reason to care about Windows 7.
      4. Agreed. On the other hand, I/O bandwidth is not "as much as you want", so the manner in which the OS manages that bottleneck is important. Also, since the new OS will undoubtedly be installed on some systems that are still constrained to 3GB "effective" RAM, memory footprint is still important. Furthermore, as the industry continues to move in the direction of SSD sinstead of HDDs, it may become desirable to use an OS that is optimized for solid state disks. XP and Vista are not. Windows 7 might be.
      5. Yes, they are. And one of the supposed benefits of Windows 7 over Vista is improved power efficiency, which would be a useful feature for Netbook users.
      6. So? If anything, this is a reason not to be excited about any PC operating system, not Windows 7 in particular.
      7. Same as #6.

      To answer your final question, because:

      1. Vista is ass. Windows 7 is apparently "not ass". Presumably some people would have migrated off XP if there was a newer version that was "not ass". Now there will be one.
      2. When Windows 7 is finally released XP will be "even older" than it was when Vista was released, and hence even closer to end-of-life. That provides extra motivation for people to move off the old technology.
      3. In keeping with the previous bullet, Microsoft may start dropping support for XP in their other products. That will motivate a lot of people to upgrade.

      Really, though, I don't care what everybody else does. I'm "mildly" looking forward to Windows 7 for the simple fact that it gives me a viable upgrade path from XP.

    6. Re:All the fun of a recession by mixmatch · · Score: 1

      Microsoft's interests are pretty clear here. Vista is a non-seller, and every day that its out on store shelves Microsoft is losing potential revenue to its bad street-cred. Regardless of how many people actually buy Windows 7, it's still crucial to release it as soon as possible. It might not be something the masses will clamor for right away, but its the idea is to hush the people screaming and moaning about Vista.

    7. Re:All the fun of a recession by igb · · Score: 1

      I've updated my desktop from Win2k to XP, my dad's desktop from Win98 to XP, and a friend's laptop from Win2k to XP. So it happens.

      Slashdot readers aren't representative of the market at large. I've moved the same laptop between two versions of Windows, two Linux distributions and two major releases of Solaris. This does not read across into the population at large.

    8. Re:All the fun of a recession by buddyglass · · Score: 1

      Slashdot readers aren't representative of the market at large. I've moved the same laptop between two versions of Windows, two Linux distributions and two major releases of Solaris. This does not read across into the population at large.

      Which is why, in my post, I said:

      As for the axioms, while they may be generally true, they're not universal:

    9. Re:All the fun of a recession by FudRucker · · Score: 1

      and... ...and if windows-7 turns out to be another flop like winME & vista did? it could be the straw the breaks the camel's back, microsoft better produce a mostly bug free and responsive system that people will actually like to use or it could be curtains for microsoft in the OS department...

      just think if 7 was a flop, and microsoft quit making an OS and started just selling ms-office &other ms-applications for Linux (and other *nixes)?

      --
      Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
    10. Re:All the fun of a recession by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      The economy has tanked since Vista shipped.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    11. Re:All the fun of a recession by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Netbooks and small laptops are the current hot items.

      Guess why one of the new major advertised features of Win7 is that its UI is specifically redesigned for touchscreen operation...

    12. Re:All the fun of a recession by m.ducharme · · Score: 1

      I think GP was saying that with the economy in the tank, fewer would-be customers are going to be upgrading their hardware, slowing the adoption of Windows 7.

      --
      Rule of Slashdot #0: You and people like you are not representative of the larger population. - A.C.
    13. Re:All the fun of a recession by gargletheape · · Score: 1

      Sigh...that's the sad thing about failed jokes...

    14. Re:All the fun of a recession by 4D6963 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yeah, people just "grab free distros". Like my sister who just bought a laptop with Vista, I asked her if she liked it and she just said "oh no I just grabbed an ISO of Debian through BitTorrent, burnt it and installed it over the Vista install. By the way, is ZFS any good or should I just stick to ext3?". I was like "wow!". Then she proceeded to ask me if she needed to vi into /etc/fstab to mount her iPod.

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    15. Re:All the fun of a recession by srivatsanm · · Score: 1

      If Microsoft can continue to sell Win7 rather than continue to extend the life of XP for various reasons (netbooks), they'd have set themselves up for surviving the recession as gracefully as possible. Now, how bad that would be despite potential good efforts is a wait-and-see game. 1. XP costs less than Vista partly because OEM's can ship cheaper hardware for XP. If Win7 would run on comparable hardware, and not be 'slow' (or require premium upgrades for graphics chipsets, extra RAM etc), OEM's can sell Win7 for almost the same price, and get consumers to like what they have to offer. This has been hard to do with 'slow' Vista, but Win7 seems to work well on 'less' hardware. It seems like at least not poised to lose again. 2. Businesses like appcompat, and better group policy management. http://blogs.msdn.com/e7/ mentions (very briefly) that Microsoft has a separate 'triad' for appcompat. Hopefully, they are delivering. Also, Windows has been good with group policy for a long time, and one can only hope that Win7 has grown in that front. The key question is whether it will be worth the while for businesses to upgrade to Win7. If they can upgrade on existing hardware without too many problems, that would have been a win. They get better administrative control with a newer OS. Again,the key question is one of performance with 'less' hardware. 3. Anecdotal evidence suggests that Win7 is really solid on netbooks. If this is true, then Win7 is already a better chioce in this market. Ordinary people are seeking out netbooks because they are cheap and attractive, and a good OS like Win7 that is likely to support good touchscreen controls is exactly what's needed in this market to help the non-geek consumers. Hopefully Microsoft has improved Win7 to play nice with SSD's. It doesn't look like Win7 is too huge on big-ticket features that can be 'seen'. But that's not where Vista needed improvements - Vista already had plenty of big new features that one could 'see'. So Win7 should ideally be trying to deliver on the 'unseen' fronts to make the whole OS more viable. Again, I'm getting the feeling that this is true.

    16. Re:All the fun of a recession by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because Windows 7 is Vista (or Mohave, I'm confused).

    17. Re:All the fun of a recession by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes.. on the upside you can enjoy yourself imagining how they feel as people mod the original +5 funny..

    18. Re:All the fun of a recession by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 4, Funny

      Then she proceeded to ask me if she needed to vi into /etc/fstab to mount her iPod.

      Wow, your sister sure is stupid - she should know better and use Emacs for that!

    19. Re:All the fun of a recession by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1

      I had a similar conversation with my mum (who used to write Fortran II on IBM709's). She is still complaining her quilting machine interface is not supported on UltraSparc hardware though.

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    20. Re:All the fun of a recession by beef3k · · Score: 1

      (...)That will motivate a lot of people to upgrade.

      Uhm, you mean force a lot of people to upgrade

    21. Re:All the fun of a recession by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      To your #2:
      "XP going end-of-life" DOES NOT constitute a justification. Security, that cannot be managed by a firewall, can be constituted.
      The only reason to UPGRADE is application compatibility - THE ONLY REASON. And since Office 2007 does not draw too many crowds in the business world(Does MSO2007 support XP?), there are little, if any, applications to migrate for.

    22. Re:All the fun of a recession by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      May I fuck her?

    23. Re:All the fun of a recession by buddyglass · · Score: 1

      I think many CIOs would disagree with you about whether product end-of-life constitutes a justification for upgrading. You may consider them just as "wrong" as I am, but I would bet money that my view is the prevailing opinion.

      It's hard to work around OS flaws allowing remote exploits via third-party software, and firewalls only stop attacks originating from outside your network.

    24. Re:All the fun of a recession by buddyglass · · Score: 1

      Only if the user is interested in using the new version of the Microsoft app that lacks XP support. Many can do without. At least, until websites start rendering incorrectly or they're unable to open documents in Word. But I expect it will be a good while before web standards have evolved to the point where IE8 is considered unusable.

    25. Re:All the fun of a recession by Balance+Man · · Score: 1

      ::boing::

    26. Re:All the fun of a recession by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      By the way, is ZFS any good or should I just stick to ext3?

      To find out, your sister needs to upgrade to FreeBSD.

      (dons flameproof jacket)

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    27. Re:All the fun of a recession by Gothmolly · · Score: 1

      Most chicks know to just 'mount' their iPod directly.

      --
      I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
    28. Re:All the fun of a recession by alexandre_ganso · · Score: 1

      No way. Chicks use nano.

    29. Re:All the fun of a recession by WuphonsReach · · Score: 1

      With Vista as my only option, my plan was to stick with XP as long as humanly possible. I have my own volume-licensed copy of XP Pro, so it's a somewhat realistic plan. If Windows 7 proves to be as high-quality as the pundits claim, that might just be enough to make me leave XP.

      That's our current plan. We pushed through a WinXP upgrade across the board just before Vista shipped (because we knew Vista was a dog). All of the machines are dual-core, 2GB RAM, and will probably last us well into the 2011-2012 time frame. We also tossed a few copies of XP in a drawer for builds that we didn't plan for.

      Still, I'm hoping that Win7 is at least decent and useful like XP. Because as we get past 2010, it's going to be harder and harder to keep XP running. Skipping Vista was easy if you timed things right, but skipping two generations is going to be difficulty.

      (So nice not to have the majority of the PCs still running Win98 with 32MB or 64MB of RAM... that was a real PITA.)

      --
      Wolde you bothe eate your cake, and have your cake?
    30. Re:All the fun of a recession by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Delayed Post: You should introduce me to your sister.

  16. Where did I see that look? Humm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nice article. Screenshots tells a lot from a OS.
    *shrugs*

    So congratulations, from that pictures I can tell that Microsoft R&D Lab had a great time installing KDE 4 and plasmoids while the core Microsoft team was busy masquerading Vista.

    Give me a break!

    1. Re:Where did I see that look? Humm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So congratulations, from that pictures I can tell that Microsoft R&D Lab had a great time installing KDE 4 and plasmoids while the core Microsoft team was busy masquerading Vista.

      Give me a break!

      Oh, so MS finally made KDE4 stable and usable?
      About time.

  17. Looks promising by jrothwell97 · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Finally it looks like Microsoft are doing what they should have done with Vista. It's more stable, they've finally fixed the taskbar, got rid of the ridiculous sidebar and seem to have made it a lot quicker, according to the reports I've read. I've not used it myself yet, but after the disaster that was Vista, as they say, things can only get better.

    --
    Those using pirated Tinysoft signatures(TM) are a real threat to society and should all be thrown in jail.
    1. Re:Looks promising by Goodgerster · · Score: 1

      Fixed the taskbar?!

  18. Links to the torrent (for Google impaired folks) by Doug52392 · · Score: 5, Informative

    File name: Windows.7.Beta.1.Build_7000.0.081212-1400_client_en-us_Ultimate-GB1CULFRE_EN_DVD.iso [MSDN iSO]
    Size: 2,618,793,984 bytes (2.44 GB)
    http://www.mininova.org/tor/2123650

  19. Where did I see that look? Humm... by miknix · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Nice article. Screen shots tells a lot from a OS.
    *shrugs*

    So congratulations, from that pictures I can tell that Microsoft R&D Lab had a great time installing KDE 4 and plasmoids while the core Microsoft team was busy masquerading Vista.

    Give me a break!

  20. I hope that isn't the final look and feel by NinthAgendaDotCom · · Score: 1

    Looks like a step back in the eye candy department. Maybe the author of the screenshots had the aero stuff turned off? It looks awfully flat and plain.

    --
    -- http://ninthagenda.com/
    1. Re:I hope that isn't the final look and feel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Looks like a step back in the eye candy department. Maybe the author of the screenshots had the aero stuff turned off?

      Yes, it is turned off in those screenshots.

    2. Re:I hope that isn't the final look and feel by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      You mean, like, they could use the resources to make them available to the programs trying to run on the OS and not for flashy gimmicks? That's unpossible!

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  21. What recession? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It sounds like the world will no longer exist tomorrow. The so called recession is mostly a psychological problem. The economy goes down by 1 or 2 percent, that is not much. All the other effects like doubling unemployment rates are only the product of exaggeration in the media and by the corporate managers.

    1. Re:What recession? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      John? John McCain? Welcome to slashdot!

  22. Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by shatfield · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I just had to repair a friend's Vista PC which had 3 Trojan programs running that had taken control of her internet even though Kaspersky antivirus was installed. The Trojan had worked its way onto her computer via a P2P program that her daughter was using to get music, and that stopped Kaspersky from being able to update its definitions, which it was set to do every day. I couldn't even go out to Microsoft's Windows Update site to get Windows updates, and Windows Defender (which was also installed and running) was disabled by one of the Trojan programs. It took me over an hour to clean it all up and get her machine running properly again.

    Not even 2 antivirus programs could stop this from happening on the latest Windows PC.

    This is what is stopping me from being even the slightest bit excited about Windows 7.

    --
    "To make a mistake is only human; to persist in a mistake is idiotic." Cicero
    1. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by thermian · · Score: 1

      anti virus programs won't stop trojans. What you need is a specific trojan killer. I use prevX myself.

      My son just had his PC hit with a driveby download on a hacked WoW site, and it started the old familier popups and fake windows security centre icon thing. I installed prevx and ten minutes later the trojan, which got past his AV software, was history.

      The only issue, if its an issue at all, is its subscription based, and you can't get it to work without paying, because it uses their online database to work out what the malicious software is.

      I'm happy to pay though, its saved me from re-installing three machines now.

      --
      A learning experience is one of those things that say, 'You know that thing you just did? Don't do that.' - D. Adams
    2. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by plutoXL · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So in this case the weakest link was not Vista.
      A bigger problem was Kaspersky AV not recognizing the trojans.
      The biggest problem was a teenage girl who didn't think it mattered if she downloaded britney.mp3 or britney.exe

    3. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      just stop looking at goat porn and stop downloading warez.

    4. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      exactly.

      All the security software in the world doesnt mean anything, if the user behind the PC doesnt know the complexities of the system and how it works in its entirety.

      Even the experts get viruses but odds go way up when you have no clue as to what or how that magical computer thingy works.

       

    5. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me guess, she had UAC disabled, maybe even by you?

      Also, as long as people install suspect P2P software (which you failed to name) you can pretty much expect to get some kind of trojan unless you are REALLY careful about it.

    6. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by shatfield · · Score: 1

      Yep, exactly. Had Kaspersky actually protected the PC, I would not have had to do anything.

      As for the girl, she was told twice not to run that program, yet she did it anyways. She promised not to do it again.

      The weakest link will always be the human seated at the computer... Anna Kournikova anyone? You'd think with that bit of information, the AV programs would be geared towards eliminating the PEBKAC error altogether... but apparently it is more difficult than one would expect.

      --
      "To make a mistake is only human; to persist in a mistake is idiotic." Cicero
    7. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by shatfield · · Score: 1

      That may be true for Windows based PCs, but even the most novice Mac or Linux user doesn't have to worry about it at all.

      --
      "To make a mistake is only human; to persist in a mistake is idiotic." Cicero
    8. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Solution:
      Swap with known good (l)user if available.

      Sorry, but I get calls at work every day from people just like your friend, who just arbitrarily download music from shit networks like LimeWire, and have no clue to stop doing what they are doing when something pops up with "Hi, I am a virus, click OK to install. [OK] [Rly, OK] [V OK]" each time they try to play a song.

      No Windows OS will ever fix user stupidity, so please stop dreaming on that.

      If it's that bad, now's a good time to put a penguin in their box, or just tell them to get a damn Mac.

    9. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are free to execute whatever program you want on my Linux box.
      The worse scenario is having the trojan to sniff the logged in user actions.
      There is no way it would damage the entire system.

      And guess what? No annoying popups everytime you want to exec something.

    10. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      That statement is thrown around way too much. Its not true. Mac users do have something to fear, and Linux users do as well. All of these systems can be compromised. There is no such thing as security. Mac and Linux users have less to fear in terms of the general garbage that one runs into on a day to day basis on the net, but that does not mean they're safe from harm.

    11. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      That's because it's right now not worthwile for the bad folks to upload britney.dmg and britney.deb or britney.rpm to the filesharing sites.

      --
      This space for rent.
    12. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2, Informative

      To disable Kaspersky & Defender, any trojan would need full admin privileges. If UAC is enabled, this means an elevation request dialog. If your friend opened what she thought was a picture, and then clicked "yes" on an elevation request, then there really isn't much more to be done there except educating her. It would go precisely the same on Linux if she had that.

      And if she runs Vista with UAC disabled (which means that she had purposedly disabled it, as it's enabled by default) - well, what did people say for years about always running as root?..

    13. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by shatfield · · Score: 1

      You are correct. I am a Mac user, and I do worry about viruses and trojans being on my computer. I worry that I'll receive them in an email attachment and unknowingly pass them along to my less fortunate Windows using friends. I worry that I will get one in my installation of Windows in VMWare.

      I've been thinking about running an a/v program to prevent this from happening... I like those people; I don't want them to suffer unnecessarily.

      I will not fear trojans and viruses until they start appearing en masse on the Mac platform. Until then, I will sleep more soundly than my Windows using friends, that is for sure.

      --
      "To make a mistake is only human; to persist in a mistake is idiotic." Cicero
    14. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by shatfield · · Score: 1

      ... and I hope it remains "not worthwhile" for a long time to come. I enjoy using a computing environment that I don't have to worry about.

      --
      "To make a mistake is only human; to persist in a mistake is idiotic." Cicero
    15. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by shatfield · · Score: 1

      You are absolutely correct. UAC is enabled, as I received no fewer than 30 requests to authorize the system to perform tasks while I was removing said trojans.

      The problem is that both Kaspersky and Windows Defender didn't prevent (or defend the computer from) the trojans from being installed. Even with admin privileges, any trojan or virus should have hit a brick wall when trying to do *anything* to the installed AV program's installation or runtime... and either Kaspersky or Windows Defender should have been able to completely remove the trojan or virus when it was initially installed.

      As it turned out, I had to download a special program from Kaspersky's website in order to clean up the computer. At least they read their forums, where hundreds of other unfortunate Windows users were posting their terrible experiences.

      --
      "To make a mistake is only human; to persist in a mistake is idiotic." Cicero
    16. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah retarded users also are what make me not excited about windows...........

    17. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      System Restore - from a boot cd. The latest restore point shouldn't have the trojan installed, given that system restore hasn't been turned off and updates have been installed recently.

    18. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stop downloading music and programs from shady P2P sites, or are you saying you want to be able to view, download and run anything you want without any regard for security and expect Windows to save the day for you?

      Maybe you should get a Mac.

    19. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      Mod parent -1, Problem Exists Between Keyboard And Chair.

      Seriously, don't give anybody who doesn't know how to use a computer (i.e. your friend's daughter) an Administrator account. If some idiot with full privileges wants to install some Trojan-infected P2P program (or run such an infected program that she downloaded from somewhere) it is actually the OS's job to allow, not prevent, this.

      Seriously, these are Trojans, not worms or even classic viruses. They are simply programs that do something else beyond what you think they do. It's not a security breach in the OS. It doesn't require any privileges beyond what a normal installation on any system (including Mac or Linux) needs. If you explicitly run malware on your system - which is all a Trojan is, malware that you have to tell the OS to execute - you're hosed on *any* general-purpose OS provided that you have the necessary credentials.

      This kind of thing is not even remotely Microsoft's fault, and the same kind of crap exists on Linux and OS X as well. It's the easiest kind of malware to write, and it's literally impossible to be immune to it and still have a general-purpose operating system that you have control over (i.e. Admin/root privileges). The only preventions are limited permissions - otherwise, the OS has no way to tell that you *didn't* want to modify it to prevent Windows Update for some completely legitimate purpose.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    20. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      The biggest problem was a teenage girl who didn't think it mattered if she downloaded britney.mp3 or britney.exe

      To be fair, either is a bad thing. Just for different reasons. :P

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    21. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, the user was letting their daughter run an application thats a known gateway for viruses and malware to get on a system run as a full user (instead of standard or limited), no parental controls (to limit applications they can or cannot run, can or cannot infect under their permissions) ? And thats Vista's fault? How do you know it came through the P2P program. More likely it came through flaws in IE that have been popping up like weeds lately, or more specifically flash bugs from myspace of facebook. 9 out of 10 of the last few removals I've had to do (I do two to three a week) have come from myspace, facebook, or various flash ads.

      Also, you do know that Kaspersky is supposed to update hourly and Defender is not an antivirus application but rather a (horrible) anti-spyware app thats been neutered since it was turned into Windows Live One Care?

    22. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      knoppix: don't leave home, to go fixed a screwed up windows system, without it.

    23. Re:Viruses and Trojans Still a Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That may be true for Windows based PCs, but even the most novice Mac or Linux user doesn't have to worry about it at all.

      That's not exactly right. Mac's can get viruses. However, I agree that it is hard to get a virus on a toaster.

  23. Windows Y Beta is better than Windows X release! by RedK · · Score: 0, Troll

    Same story everytime. Journalists just go crazy for the Beta, and so do most fanboys. They'll claim the Beta is so stable, moreso than the previous release. We saw the same thing with Windows 98, Windows 2000, Windows XP, Windows Vista, etc.. Then the release comes and it's like a cold shower as people without the rose painted glasses get their hands on it. I'm glad I'm not stuck running Windows anymore.

    --
    "Not to mention all the idiots who use words like boxen."
    Anonymous Coward on Monday August 04, @06:49PM
  24. Tom Payne by boredhacker · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    In 1984 mainstream users were choosing VMS over UNIX. Ten years later they are choosing Windows over UNIX. What part of that message aren't you getting?

    1. Re:Tom Payne by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      <span style="background-sound:britney.ogg">Maybe that mainstream is not that good at making choices?<span>

  25. How sweet of them! by aGF2c2hleA · · Score: 4, Funny

    I think their plan is to mimic the look and feel of Gnome or KDE, you know, to ease the transition for mom and pop when they switch to linux

    --
    _-_-_GSLUG_-_-_
    1. Re:How sweet of them! by JTorres176 · · Score: 1

      I was actually quite surprised by looking at the screenshots. It seems that with every new release of windows, it looks more and more like KDE.

      My favorite saying was "if you want a very pretty operating system that doesn't work with all of your favorite old software, just install Kubuntu... er, I mean Vista!"

      --
      Evil Walrus >83=
    2. Re:How sweet of them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fact that you're comparing it to Gnome shows how silly your argument is. As for the KDE comparison, well that's a load of poop too. The taskbar looks like a double-height version of the Vista taskbar, with the quicklaunch icons set to large. The Windows 7 taskbar is just an evolution of what's existed before in Windows.

    3. Re:How sweet of them! by j79zlr · · Score: 1

      Exactly what I thought, I seen the first screenshot of the taskbar and thought, Hey thats KDE?

      --
      I'm not not licking toads.
    4. Re:How sweet of them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How does it feel to know that there will never be "the year of Linux on the desktop".

    5. Re:How sweet of them! by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      i wish that kde or any other linux desktop had as good fonts and font rendering, as vista has.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    6. Re:How sweet of them! by Wo1ke · · Score: 1

      Yeah, except Vista came out before KDE got pretty and w7 looks almost exactly like Vista. The only difference is the taskbar, but that's not original to KDE.

    7. Re:How sweet of them! by Mista2 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I saw the screenshots and said, "hey, looks like KDE4!"

  26. Eh? by Junta · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm no fan of MS, but what exactly do you propose they do? They offer 64-bit variants that can run 64-bit applications of their supported platforms. They provide the platform to allow this specific thing. They provide the tools to develop for this.

    What you have is commercial application providers flat-out ignoring 64-bit capability, as it is easier to target the 32-bit subset that works both on Pentium 4 and such and new. You have to make the vendors release 64-bit enabled builds. Linux suffers from this as well, to a lesser extent. In the OSS world, they rebuilt 64-bit readily. However, Acrobat, Flash, Sun JRE all took a long time or are still taking time to completely support 64-bit. The commercial world just has a hard time justifying bothering where there is backwards compatibility and 99.9% of their usage won't exceed the limit per process restrictions.

    MS could have not published any 32-bit platform to accelerate ubiquity. Imagine the backlash at not supporting Core and Pentium 4, requiring those users to go to Core2 or Athlon64. Even then, it wouldn't have alleviated the issue as these vendors would still want to sell to XP users. MS could have omitted 32-bit compatibility, completely shooting backwards compatibility in the foot.

    So while I'm not crazy about Windows, their x86_64 bit strategy is not any worse than other platforms, it's the commercial third-parties that cause your grief.

    --
    XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    1. Re:Eh? by Cally · · Score: 0, Troll

      I'm no fan of MS, but what exactly do you propose they do?

      Personally, I propose that Microsoft fuck off and die (in a chemical fire.) So far, they've declined my offer, though things look promising for the new year :)

      --
      "None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free." -- Goethe
    2. Re:Eh? by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      There's a third route they could've done... ran XP in a VM for 32-bit stuff, and used a completely different API for 64-bit stuff. Make the VM clunky on purpose. (The Classic approach, except make the VM clunkier than that. I'm thinking full-screen only.)

      Then, 32-bit stuff will run just fine, but it'll be slow and sucky. 64-bit stuff will (in theory) run great.

    3. Re:Eh? by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      That's not an option for MS, like for Apple, because there's a whole fuckton of Win32 applications and once those don't run well, everyone(including Slashdot) will be all over their ass for not being fully backward compatible.

      --
      This space for rent.
    4. Re:Eh? by Chang · · Score: 1

      Microsoft has broken backwards compatibility in every major release.

      The broke binary driver compatibility in a stable series with Windows 2003 SP1. Imagine patching up to date and being greeted with a blue screen on the reboot. What a cluster fsck that was.

      Microsoft spends enormous effort on backwards compat but they have never made it 100% compatible - that is a myth.

    5. Re:Eh? by sleeponthemic · · Score: 1

      I hear what you're saying, I'm not saying that there aren't hard decisions/resolutions to be made but right now I don't read a strategy at all. Just a neglected OS (due to commercial viability) that is there if you want it. If all windows 7 versions were 64 bit and 32 bit capable (ie, together) then manufacturers could start picking and choosing whether they put out a 64 bit client. Think about what they are doing having separate OS's for this. Failing to usher in change.

      All the while, applications and the OS eat more ram and anybody who uses professional software that relies on a lot of ram (multimedia people and so forth) are more stifled than ever.

      My guess is that much as I dislike Apple, they will have a much more smooth transition.

      --
      I record my sleeptalking
    6. Re:Eh? by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      Except it would've also allowed them to give each user an XP sandbox to play in.

      Win32 apps may well have ended up running more securely in this setup than they do in Vista, with better backwards compatibility (it isn't running on something sorta kinda like XP, it IS XP under the hood, in the VM.)

  27. Yes, because 2009 IS the year of the Linux desktop by EXMSFT · · Score: 1

    My local Linux advocate told me so!

  28. Same Desktop UI model we've had for the last 15yrs by synthesizerpatel · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Even with amazing projects coming out of the Microsoft labs like SeaDragon and Photosynth, we're offered up the latest generation of Windows with the same, exact model of desktop, start menu, icons, folders, etc. It just looks like next genetic descendent in the Windows line to me -- the only difference is smoother palettes and corners to mimic 'whats hot' in computer UI design these days.

    One could say that the 'future' of desktop UIs was paved by Enlightenment which truely started branching away from the Windows and Macintosh genetic lines, but we need something more.

    We need the equivalent of the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_Remote Apple remote for desktop management, not the shape, size or number of buttons -- but the idea that less is more, context is key and that it's about providing the user with enough to get their work done, not providing so much that they get lost.

    I don't want eye candy. I want functionality that makes sense because it couldn't be any easier.

  29. No, Compare with 2K by recoiledsnake · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Why not compare with 2K ? Also, 2K is better than XP by the same metrics you mentioned. Then why are you running XP?

    --
    This space for rent.
    1. Re:No, Compare with 2K by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except for the nerfed codec/multimedia support in 2k.

    2. Re:No, Compare with 2K by sdkit · · Score: 1

      To be fair XPs install base is much larger than 2Ks so the XP comparison is more relavant. The comparison with 2K would be more fun because the guys I know who are stuck on 2K like a good argument. ;)

    3. Re:No, Compare with 2K by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also, 2K is better than XP

      Nope. It isn't and never has been. Seriously.

    4. Re:No, Compare with 2K by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      One word: Cleartype.

      That really is the only reason I moved from 2000 to XP, because otherwise there isn't much difference.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    5. Re:No, Compare with 2K by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      I would disagree with that. Win2k is really nice but I wouldn't have said Win2k vs Win XP Pro will result in a long list of differences.

      The fact is they are nearly the same OS.

    6. Re:No, Compare with 2K by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      Actually, I believe 2000 couldn't always fully clean up after a crashed application, eventually requiring a reboot if you had to terminate programs. Of course, you had to reboot every patch Tuesday anyhow.

      Vista (and Win7) are able to apply most patches (kernel and certain other central components aside) without rebooting. I've gone for 3 months or so, installing all patches, without rebooting. No previous home/workstation version of Windows could do that. (Server editions are somewhat better, though still similar to their contemporary client edition.)

      I've managed to BSOD 2000, XP, and Vista. Vista it was using some really screwy and unsupported drivers/driver configurations (beta driver versions, or XP drivers that weren't to stable to start with shoehorned into Vista's kernel). 2000 and XP could be BSODed by sufficiently misbehaving user-mode software on completely stock and MS-approved drivers. Vista certainly has its faults, but downtime - unexpected or otherwise - is not one I've seen on a properly configured system.

      Of course, proper configuration means, among other things, reformat that OEM shit straight off and do a clean install. The difference in performance, stability, and general bugginess between OEM images and clean installations is astounding. The difference in user opinion of Vista is fairly similarly divided.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    7. Re:No, Compare with 2K by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why run XP over 2K? Compared to XP->Vista, 2K->XP is a relatively small change - nearly all of the significant changes have settings to revert them. Not only that, the performance of XP is, if anything, superior to 2K.

      Anyways, I'd still run 2K, but MS has made it all but impossible to get legally, and many hardware manufacturers no longer support it.

    8. Re:No, Compare with 2K by atraintocry · · Score: 1

      Dude, multimedia support? Next you'll be talking about long filenames. They need to stop trying to cater to Apple customers and west-coast bloggers and just make a nice gray squarish thingy for running DOS programs. That's the Microsoft we know and love.

    9. Re:No, Compare with 2K by atraintocry · · Score: 1

      Wait until the end of March, when DST is in effect, and ask them what time it is. You'll be sure to have a major disagreement on that one :D

    10. Re:No, Compare with 2K by atraintocry · · Score: 1

      I can add a few more: built-in CD burning, firewall, fast user switching, driver rollbacks, remote desktop, remote assistance.

      Obviously all of that can be done with third-party software, but other than wanting to avoid product activation, I can't see why someone would go out of their way.

      (Cleartype is great with the Vista fonts. I tend to go back and forth with it on XP for whatever reason.)

  30. Re:Windows Y Beta is better than Windows X release by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Same story everytime. Journalists just go crazy for the Beta, and so do most fanboys. They'll claim the Beta is so stable, moreso than the previous release. We saw the same thing with Windows 98, Windows 2000, Windows XP, Windows Vista, etc..

    No "we" didn't. You just made that up.

  31. I don't want excuses... by Sparky+McGruff · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sure, MS may be right about driver and application incompatibilities. But, when I bought a brand new laptop, pre-loaded with Vista, that has the Vista logo on the box, I don't want to hear that it's the fault of the network chipset provider that the wireless network works marginally at best. MS and the hardware vendors need to get their shit together, so that they don't tell me that a computer is "Win 7 Compatible" or comes pre-loaded with Win 7 when it really isn't.

    If you're trying to install a new OS on an old machine, that's one thing. You definitely need to do your homework to make sure that the off-brand network card you bought will work with the new OS. However, a new machine pre-loaded with the OS should run. If MS can't make sure that the OEMs have working machines before they slap a "Vista" or "Win 7" sticker on the damn thing, they should stop making software, period.

    1. Re:I don't want excuses... by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 1

      MS is not responsible for what your computer vendor loads on the computer. Blaming them is putting the blame in the wrong place.

      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
    2. Re:I don't want excuses... by gbjbaanb · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Blaming them is putting the blame in the wrong place.

      It is if MS demands a "Vista Ready" certification programme from the vendors before said vendors can claim its suitable for Vista.

    3. Re:I don't want excuses... by Sparky+McGruff · · Score: 1

      If I go to the Honda dealer to get a part, I don't want to hear that it's the dealer's fault. If the part has a Honda label on it, it better damn well be "Honda compatible".

      The "Vista Ready" sticker is not just marketing -- it's an implicit promise that the damn thing will run Vista. If MS can't work it out with the OEMs that they will only put "Vista ready" or "Win 7 ready" stickers on the boxes of computers that actually run the software, they shouldn't put the stickers on the box. Period. It's nice that after a year and a half (and a few updates including SP1) that my laptop is actually compatible with Vista. And, I'm sure it was the fault of Realtek for not producing a decent driver for the network hardware in a prompt fashion, and Gateway for choosing that chipset, etc. But, in the end, if MS is allowing vendors to fraudulently stick a label on the box that says that the computer is all set to run Vista or Win 7 when it isn't -- that's piss-poor business on MS's part.

    4. Re:I don't want excuses... by Sparky+McGruff · · Score: 1

      It is if MS demands a "Vista Ready" certification programme from the vendors before said vendors can claim its suitable for Vista.

      I wonder what that certification program involves -- in addition to waiting for a check to clear.

    5. Re:I don't want excuses... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't want to hear that it's the fault of the network chipset provider that the wireless network works marginally at best.

      If the excuse is good enough for Linux, then it's good enough for Vista.

    6. Re:I don't want excuses... by Sparky+McGruff · · Score: 1

      And if they put a big "Linux Compatible" sticker on the box (or it comes pre-loaded with a non-working Linux), I'd be pissed off at that, too.

    7. Re:I don't want excuses... by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      Of course, you might be forgetting the way certain vendors (*AHEM* Intel *AHEM*) did NOT meet the original versions of the requirements, then forced Microsoft to change them... resulting in either computers that claimed to be "Vista capable" but couldn't run Aero at all, or those that claimed to be "Vista Premium capable" but ran Aero like crap because a lot of their graphics stuff was still handled by the CPU.

      Not saying Microsoft was blameless in that one - they should have stood up for their customers more strongly - but when you've got major manufacturers and major assemblers/retailers demanding that the sticker requirements be reduced, and *technically* Vista does run on them... Well, I still disagree with what they did, but I can see why.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    8. Re:I don't want excuses... by Daengbo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Just to make sure that you know, MS is currently being sued for reducing its "Vista Ready" requirements so that hardware which wasn't capable (mostly Intel graphics chips) was labeled as being so.

    9. Re:I don't want excuses... by Daengbo · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Like the MSI Wind that came without Linux drivers for the Wifi or webcam? Returns for the Linux version were four times higher than the Windows version (with working Wifi and wireless). Shock!

    10. Re:I don't want excuses... by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      . But, when I bought a brand new laptop, pre-loaded with Vista, that has the Vista logo on the box, I don't want to hear that it's the fault of the network chipset provider that the wireless network works marginally at best. MS and the hardware vendors need to get their shit together, so that they don't tell me that a computer is "Win 7 Compatible" or comes pre-loaded with Win 7 when it really isn't.

      You act like this is something that just started with Vista. The machine I'm posting this from is an old 2.8 GHz P4 machine running XP, with a "Designed for Microsoft Windows XP" sticker on it, with 256 MB of RAM (double the recommended amount!), and it runs like molasses in January.

    11. Re:I don't want excuses... by Daengbo · · Score: 1

      Interesting that this is flamebait when it's 100% true.

  32. Links to the torrent (for Google impaired folks) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Click here to download a real replacement to previous versions of Windows.

  33. Installed it already by Aggrajag · · Score: 1

    I installed Windows 7 yesterday and it seems that this is the OS
    that Vista should have been. Much more responsive and boots a lot
    faster. Haven't tried copying any large amount of files though...

    I am going to try installing Steam and Crysis tonight and check gaming
    performance (if the games work at all, that is).

    1. Re:Installed it already by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      You're doing it wrong. In order to be eligible for getting modded up, your post must be like this one .

      --
      This space for rent.
  34. Who would want the pirated version? by Lord+Byron+II · · Score: 5, Funny

    I can understand somebody wanting the pirated version of a video game, or even a release-version of an OS, but who in their right mind would tie up their Internet connection for a day and risk the legal trouble and possibility of a virus/worm/backdoor to download a beta copy of an operating system that's built on the most reviled version of Windows since WinMe?

    1. Re:Who would want the pirated version? by LennyP · · Score: 0

      Actually, I would want it to test in a virtual machine to see if it's worth upgrading/buying it to replace my XP and or Vista boxes. I would never use it illegally. Than again, given a choice I would never us Vista legally either.

    2. Re:Who would want the pirated version? by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, I think BOB was hated sufficiently enough to have the hate last several years beyond WinME. In fact I think the healing began somewhere around "Mission Accomplished". Perhaps that's what George W. Bush was referring to?

    3. Re:Who would want the pirated version? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone who's curious and knows how to use virtual machines. Now stop trolling.

    4. Re:Who would want the pirated version? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is this thing called a checksum ... being a /. reader you should know what they are. If you don't, you are on the wrong site ... proceed directly to disney.com

    5. Re:Who would want the pirated version? by joyfeather · · Score: 1

      For some of us its our job. No matter what we think of Windows, our livelihood depends upon our knowledge of whatever flavor of Windows the customer is using. And that means staying ahead of the game. My current personal system is triple booting between Ubuntu, XP, and Vista. Why would I ignore Windows 7?

    6. Re:Who would want the pirated version? by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 1

      As per ignoring customer demands: you'd be stupid to do as such. Instead, I have a question concerning your triple boot.

      Are you using a virtualization tech to keep all 3 up at the same time?

      --
    7. Re:Who would want the pirated version? by joyfeather · · Score: 1

      No, but that would be fun. I have to reboot each time I want to switch OS's. I loaded VMplayer, and tried 2 different Ubuntu images in my XP load, but neither would run..I think they had problems with my hardware. I wanted to play with Server 2008 as well, but the only appliance that VMplayer has for it is out of trial period time.

    8. Re:Who would want the pirated version? by RedK · · Score: 1

      Not quite ahead of the game are you. Try virtualbox if you don't want to fork over money for VMWare Workstation. It will boot everything you want to run just fine and it's free and Free.

      --
      "Not to mention all the idiots who use words like boxen."
      Anonymous Coward on Monday August 04, @06:49PM
    9. Re:Who would want the pirated version? by Tibor+the+Hun · · Score: 1

      It's insightful, not funny..

      --
      If you don't know what AltaVista is (was), get off my lawn.
  35. Note to self by recoiledsnake · · Score: 2, Insightful
    1. In any story about Vista/Windows 7, extolling XP/2K/98/98SE/95/DOS as the best OS ever gives you moderator love. Mentioning that you run Vista will either get you modded down or ignored.

    2. In a story about Macs, mentioning that you use any form of Windows will take you to karma hell, praising OS X will get you modded up, mentioning Linux will affect your karma based on your luck of draw moderators depending on which kind of fanboy they are. In any case, you will get a ton of long highly modded up replies about how OS X is better

    3. In a story about Linux, mentioning that you use any form of Windows will take you to karma hell, praising Linux will get you modded up, mentioning OS X will affect your karma based on your luck of draw moderators depending on which kind of fanboy they are. In any case, you will get a ton of long highly modded up replies about how Linux is better.

    4. In any other story, mentioning that you use any form of Windows will take you to karma hell, and praising Linux, OS X, BSD, Plan 9, OS/2, BeOS etc. will take you to karma heaven.

    Anyone wanna make a graphical represenation of the above to make it easier to understanding on a glance? So, Vista/Windows 7 stories are the only opportunity for Windows users to come out of the woodwork and not pretend they like other OSes. It's amazing how many of them there are actually are around these parts.

    --
    This space for rent.
    1. Re:Note to self by maird · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That's the same thing as saying everyone at a Masonic Lodge meeting is a Freemason! The real problem you are describing is that the /. slogan isn't "News for Windows hating nerds, stuff that matters". Take that up with the management, I think the majority seem to be happy with the average karma distribution being the way it is. The news for Windows loving nerds is probably somewhere else, ZDNet perhaps.

    2. Re:Note to self by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      ZDNet pales in comparison to this site with respect to smart people and discussion format. When did technology loving nerds turn into blind fanboys? The Vista kernel has some cool features the other OSes don't, like network and I/O priority. Technical discussion about such things have been lost in all the 'M$ sucks' noise.

      --
      This space for rent.
    3. Re:Note to self by maird · · Score: 1

      Well, putting my sarcastic response to your top post aside - Didn't you contribute to the noise by top posting about the noise, instead of top posting a technical comment that "The Vista Kernel has some cool features that other OSes don't, like network and I/O priority". Those kinds of comments frequently provoke informed (and interesting) debate about the technology. Though you would, of course, face a headwind - which can be overcome by keeping it technical, and maybe replacing words like cool with interesting/innovative/inetc.

      I generally agree with your point.

    4. Re:Note to self by earlymon · · Score: 1

      There are some interesting and possibly strange mods for this article.

      However:

      2. In a story about Macs, mentioning that you use any form of Windows will take you to karma hell, praising OS X will get you modded up, mentioning Linux will affect your karma based on your luck of draw moderators depending on which kind of fanboy they are. In any case, you will get a ton of long highly modded up replies about how OS X is better

      Then explain http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1074245&cid=26243365 that (as I post this) is at 5.

      I think that you're having a bad day and over-responding. The noise level is always high for OS X or Windows critical articles (where critical means what it means, not necessarily positive or negative).

      If you find someone modded down unfairly, then post a "MOD PARENT UP" reply - it very often works, or at least draws attention to a decent post.

      If you find someone modded up ridiculously, then post a "YOU ARE WRONG" reply - it sometimes works, but it at least draws attention to a counterpoint.

      Mod points are there to focus attention and allow us at a glance to filter signal from noise. It's not a perfect system, but it is what it is.

      You've got a karma bonus modifier on your posts right now, so your karma is excellent - what's your real complaint??? I agree with maird's response, above - http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1074689&cid=26251033

      Above all, do you metamod? That's a way to improve the system.

      <humor>Thank goodness both of us are on our way to +5s for these posts, given that we're both completely off-topic!</humor>

      --
      Pathological kinda promises Path + Logical - but instead, you get stuck with pathetic.
    5. Re:Note to self by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      The real problem you are describing is that the /. slogan isn't "News for Windows hating nerds, stuff that matters". Take that up with the management, I think the majority seem to be happy with the average karma distribution being the way it is. The news for Windows loving nerds is probably somewhere else, ZDNet perhaps.

      I wouldn't say it's that radical. I do post a fair number of Windows apologia posts in such stories, normally responding to comments which get the technical details blatantly wrong - I do it in other kinds of stories, too, but as Windows gets kicked for often that most, so I get more such posts on average. I see very, very few of them actually downmodded, and I do see some modded up to +5 every now and then (most often, it's concise replies correcting the parent with a reference to back the claim). And, on the whole, in every such story on /. it's easy to see both the upmodded criticism of Windows, and the upmodded rebuttal of said criticism - just scroll up in this story, you'll spot a few of the latter. There's still more negative posts visible, but I wouldn't say anyone is totally silenced. On the whole, both points of view are visible, even with (unfortunately) too many mods using their points as a way of saying "I disagree".

      The same goes for Apple stories, and all other stuff that GP mentions. Yes, /. certainly has a bias on the whole (on pretty much any topic, really, not just MS or Apple), but there are enough upmodded comments on all sides to get an unbiased picture if you care to look.

    6. Re:Note to self by Juln · · Score: 1

      I think the problem is that Vista is overall so slow and fragile, that it's hard to care if it has 'network and I/O priority' or not.

      --
      Juln
    7. Re:Note to self by Juln · · Score: 1

      Is there some new rule that 20% of the posts on a story have to be about Slashdot moderation?

      --
      Juln
    8. Re:Note to self by Draek · · Score: 1

      It's interesting to note, however, that your post only works for praise. Criticism of OSX will usually get you modded down, cricism of Linux will *always* get you modded down unless it's to praise OSX in which case you and any "me too" reply will be modded up, and criticism of Windows will usually get you modded up unless it's a story about Office suites (don't ask me why, that's just what I've seen).

      So essentially, the easiest way to gain karma on Slashdot is to praise whatever OS the article is about as long as it's not Vista, and if it's not about OSes praise anything but Windows, the more obscure the better. And never criticise anything, unless you *really* know what you're doing.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    9. Re:Note to self by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 1

      The Vista kernel has some cool features the other OSes don't, like network and I/O priority.

      That's awesome. As soon as they release a Service Pack that introduces a big red "Shut the fuck up and do what I tell you" button I'll be sure to check it out.

      And yes, I have tried Vista, and yes, it is truly awful. Not because of the resources it uses, but because it:

      a) does stuff I did not tell it to do and
      b) refuses to do stuff I *did* tell it to do.

      a) I can live with if it is beneficial and does not interfere with my use of the machine. b) is completely and utterly unacceptable.

      --

      People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
  36. Re:Bye bye Linux by poetmatt · · Score: 1

    Please, that's almost as bad as Microsoft using 7 as their marketing term at the same time as Intel makes the "i7". All we need is AMD to make a "7" processor and we'll be completely full of useless marketing.

    you didn't think that was a coincidence, did ya?

  37. Let's Reiterate... by His+Shadow · · Score: 5, Insightful
    For those incapable of following the train of thought, here it is...

    There is no such thing as Windows 7. This is not a new code base, it is not an overhaul of Windows framework. Windows 7 is Vista Service Pack 2. The Windows 7 bullshit coming out of Microsoft's propaganda machine is a concerted and direct effort to bury the name Vista and all the bad press associated with it. That anyone has bought into this crap is astounding. Vista was several years delayed. Now we have hordes of people believing that MS got a new OS out the door in 18 months? Wake up already.

    --

    Fiat Homos et Pereat Theos

    1. Re:Let's Reiterate... by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      Every new OS version out there has to be a new code base and a overhaul of the entire framework? When was the Linux kernel overhauled? Probably NEVER since 18 years, when it was first built based on ideas from Minix. The oldest OS X was a overhaul but the next few versions were closer to MS service packs than even MS OS revisions.

      Windows 7 does seem to contain many more features than a service pack. For example look at differences between Vista and it's SP1 and then between SP1 and Windows 7. It's not hard to believe that MS has got a new OS out so soon. Firstly, work on Windows 7 started before Vista was in final Beta/RC stages so it's longer than 18 months. Ironically, XP was released 18 months after 2000. A company the size of MS can work on only one thing at a time right? Good that you(and maybe the moderators that modded you up) don't run a software company, because throwing out the code instead of building on it is not always a good idea.

      --
      This space for rent.
    2. Re:Let's Reiterate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      a) There is already a Vista Service Pack 2. It's not Windows 7. Perhaps you should try to claim it's actually Service Pack 3?

      b) Of course it's based on Vista. ALL of their previous OSes were based on their predecessors. How else do you think Microsoft keeps providing binary compatibility?

    3. Re:Let's Reiterate... by jd142 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Right. This is Windows 98 compared to Windows 95. No major change in theme or interface, but more stable and with a few of the sharper corners rounded off. See also windows 3.0 and windows 3.1. :)

    4. Re:Let's Reiterate... by NameIsDavid · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Anyone who's actually been following Microsoft's rather frank information on Windows 7 understands that Vista was the code-base overhaul and that Windows 7 is not and was never advertised as repeating this exercise. Neither OS X nor Linux variants revamp their entire kernel architecture at each new release. However, Windows 7 does update their kernel with a new modular structure(min-win) that allows it to be more resource efficient and for unneeded portions not to load. Other aspects of performance have been gone over with a fine-toothed comb, such as windows not currently visible not consuming machine resources. The GUI has also been overhauled for usability, including fine tuning of user access control. There are at least as many updates and improvements in this OS as users are accustomed to with major releases of the other two major competitors.

    5. Re:Let's Reiterate... by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      And Leopard isnt Tiger?

      Win32 has been around forever.

      Its all an evolution. I didnt expect MS to rewrite a new OS from complete scratch in a year.

    6. Re:Let's Reiterate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vista was RTM in November of 2006. Vista SP2 is already in beta for its own independent release. Windows 2000 and Windows XP were closer to 18 months apart than Vista and Windows 7.

      Now tell me who is sucking propaganda?

    7. Re:Let's Reiterate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By your rules there is no version of any linux based OS beyond what is it 2.63? OSX is in peoples imagination and sysV never exsted. remember that Kernal version != OS Version if enough changes have been made to warrent a version change then guess what ITS A NEW VERSION. now go play with your imaginary OS and stop sounding like an idiot with double standards

    8. Re:Let's Reiterate... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      There is no such thing as Windows 7. This is not a new code base, it is not an overhaul of Windows framework. Windows 7 is Vista Service Pack 2.

      Well, not quite. Vista SP2 is a separate product that's coming soon. A more apt comparison is that of 2K to XP - a number of noticeable changes in UI, but little difference under the hood. To further the similarity, compare the internal version numbers: 2K was NT 5.0, XP was NT 5.1; Vista was NT 6.0, Win7 will be NT 6.1.

    9. Re:Let's Reiterate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agree M$FT marketing is trying to quickly move us on from Vis'duh. However, even Vista wasn't a "new code base", large parts were based on XP, how much constitutes an overhaul, is Vista just an XP SP? Personally, I don't give a crap what they call the next windows...

      Quality is what we want and what they'd better deliver. The next Microsoft Windows version had better be slick, reliable and cheap to buy/upgrade and manage, or else...

    10. Re:Let's Reiterate... by AlexMax2742 · · Score: 1

      What do you call new minor kernel revisions of Linux?

      What do you call new versions of OS X?

      Keep in mind, early versions of OS X were really awful too

      --
      I'm the guy with the unpopular opinion
    11. Re:Let's Reiterate... by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      I can't think of anything Win95 didn't have that Win98 had.

      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
    12. Re:Let's Reiterate... by azenpunk · · Score: 1

      are you saying microsoft cuts corners?

    13. Re:Let's Reiterate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Working USB support.

    14. Re:Let's Reiterate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, but you're not entirely correct. Win7 is a planned release in the new MS cycle of OS releases that it had shared with the public before the Vista messiness.

      Just like XP, the default install of Vista has its annoyances. However, it only takes a few minutes to fix.

    15. Re:Let's Reiterate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, this is not MinWin after all.

    16. Re:Let's Reiterate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      or windows 2000 and windows xp

    17. Re:Let's Reiterate... by Juln · · Score: 1

      The Linux kernel was overhauled majorly towards the release of 2.0, and then massively for 2.2. Major portions were rewritten for 2.4, which had some big advantages. It bears no resemblance to Minix under the hood - that's a joke.

      But that's not fair for a comparison to 'Windows', which is much more than a kernel. Have the codebases to KDE or GNOME have been overhauled? Yes, each has been undergoing massive development in the past 10 years, and they are more stable and sophisticated than ever.

      In the Windows world, MS was so sure that even XP was not much of an advance over Win 2000, that they didn't even give it a new version number... let's count. NT 4... NT 5 (win2K), XP (?), Vista (Windows 6), windows 7. Where did the extra number go? Ah yes, XP is basically Windows 2000. They spent that 18 months fixing bugs and dreaming up a new name.

      --
      Juln
    18. Re:Let's Reiterate... by Juln · · Score: 1

      YOU FORGOT ACTIVE DESKTOP

      --
      Juln
    19. Re:Let's Reiterate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or ME and XP for that matter

    20. Re:Let's Reiterate... by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      USB worked for me after a fresh install after having installed Windows updates.

      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
    21. Re:Let's Reiterate... by DarkProphet · · Score: 1

      USB 2.0 support, I think, and even that was in a Win98 service pack.

      --
      What could possibly hurt the security of the American people more than giving our own government the ability to hide its
    22. Re:Let's Reiterate... by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      I'd say it's a bit more analogous to the difference between 2000 and XP (which had a fairly similar release interval, as well). The interface change isn't as radical, and hardware requirements haven't increased, but otherwise it's the same idea. Take a functional core, improve it slightly while maintaining full compatibility (bump the version number by .1 to indicate this), improve the interface to better appeal to the mass-market, add just a few really substantial features but a good spread of small ones, and release it as a whole new OS.

      It worked great with XP, and while 2000 was not nearly so reviled as Vista, ME (which is what most upgraders were coming from) certainly was. I can't say for sure whether MS will pull it off again, but it's quite possible. The pre-release builds are certainly very impressive.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    23. Re:Let's Reiterate... by weicco · · Score: 1

      Yeah. Just like Linux hasn't improved a bit in almost twenty years. I'm still seeing this on the command line!

      weicco@flamebait:

      ;)

      --
      You don't know what you don't know.
    24. Re:Let's Reiterate... by shrikel · · Score: 1

      Well, Windows 2000 was NT 5.0. XP was NT 5.1 (basically 2000 with a prettier interface and more wizards). This is not a new thing for Microsoft.

      --
      Any sufficiently simple magic can be passed off as mere advanced technology.
    25. Re:Let's Reiterate... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that Windows 98 was not a more stable version of Windows 95. 95 was OK. SR 1 got worse. SR 2 got worse again. 98, worse still... 98se/me roughly the same.

    26. Re:Let's Reiterate... by PuppeteerJPV · · Score: 1

      For those incapable of following the train of thought, here it is...

      There is no such thing as Snow Leopard. This is not a new code base, it is not an overhaul of MacOS framework. Snow Leopard is Leopard Service Pack 2. The Mac bullshit coming out of Apple's propaganda machine is a concerted and direct effort to bury the name Leopard and all the bad press associated with it. That anyone has bought into this crap is astounding. Now we have hordes of people believing that Apple got a new OS out the door in 18 months? Wake up already.

      See what I did there?

    27. Re:Let's Reiterate... by initialE · · Score: 1

      You also need to be very clear on this: Microsoft has never made anyone pay extra for a service pack. So the analogy of Win95-98 or even 95b is a more apt one.

      --
      Starbucks, Harbuckle of Breath.
  38. Snappier wnidows - or upgraded computers? by shdowhawk · · Score: 1

    I'm curious to see benchmarks. I've read a couple articles recently from windows reviewers who in the past have been painfully biased, but none show anything other than screens and "It's Snappier" ... or "Works on 512mb ram". If I remember right, Vista was suppose to work with 512mb ram too, but with pretty much any of the features turned on, it's useless.

    I think the better question is ... is W7 actually "snappier", or in the past 2 years have more people simply upgraded their computers?

    1. Re:Snappier wnidows - or upgraded computers? by Aggrajag · · Score: 1

      I'm dual-booting Windows 7 and Vista and my subjective view is that Windows 7 is faster. Haven't benchmarked anything though.

    2. Re:Snappier wnidows - or upgraded computers? by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      I think the better question is ... is W7 actually "snappier",

      apparently so, but there's a ton of variance in that statement. I heard that MS was less than impressed with the "usability performance" of Vista, so they've tweaked loads of areas to make it appear faster - the actual work still takes the same amount of time, but the user gets told quicker. Perhaps they have a UI thread pool where work is sent to complete, and the user is responded to immediately. The exact opposite of the file-copy dialog in fact.

      Alternatively, they just altered the code to get rid of a load of 'candy' that no-one really noticed (eg dynamically updating progress bars etc).

  39. Task Bar?! by nurb432 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why are we so concerned about eye-candy? How about the actual system underneath?

    Is it stable, scalable, administrable? What sort of resources does it need? Ram? CPU?

    Sure, 'pretties' are nice ( especially for the end user ), but its a lot like a cake: If the cake is full of holes, lopsided or not fully cooked, does it really matter what flavor the icing is?

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Task Bar?! by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I used to share the parents opinion of eye candy, until I tried out Mac OS. The shadows on the windows really make them look like they are layer on top of each other in a way that Vista doesn't. It actually makes the system that little bit more intuitive, that little bit easier to interpret the information on the screen and work with it. It's subtle but an improvement none-the-less.

      Considering how well Mac OS runs on even old Radeon 9200 hardware I don't think it's much of a resource drain or bloated either.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    2. Re:Task Bar?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed, anyone who cares about how good the GUI looks would be using a Mac anyway.

    3. Re:Task Bar?! by The+Warlock · · Score: 2, Informative

      Win7 is supposedly designed to run on netbooks (I'm guessing that the current trend of netbooks that can only run either Linux or some eight-year-old version of Windows that Microsoft desperately wants to kill off kind of scared them a little) so system requirements should be lower than for Vista, which is a bit of a relief.

      --
      I've upped my standards, so up yours.
    4. Re:Task Bar?! by Bayoudegradeable · · Score: 1

      The "7" layer cake is a lie... (had to!)

      --
      Sig Registration Form 34c_766(a) submitted to Ministry of Signature Management. Approval pending.
    5. Re:Task Bar?! by jcuervo · · Score: 1

      The cake is a lie.

      --
      Assume I was drunk when I posted this.
    6. Re:Task Bar?! by nschubach · · Score: 1

      Anybody that cared about the OS that was on their system wouldn't be buying a Dell PC. They'd be buying a Dell PC with Microsoft Windows. The point being, people buy computers caring little about what OS is on the machine when they get it, as long as it works. People don't buy Windows PCs. They buy PCs or Macs. Since most PCs ship with Windows, that's what people buy. Period.

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    7. Re:Task Bar?! by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1
      The shadows on the windows really make them look like they are layer on top of each other

      Whioch does nothing to improve useability! Eye candy not only makes perform like wading through treacle, it look like wading through treacle as well!

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    8. Re:Task Bar?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The shadows in Mac OS X are not eye candy -- the windows have no borders, so the shadows actually fill that role.

      Vista, by contrast, has both extra-thick borders *and* shadows, which completely misses the point. (Also, how does a transparent object cast a shadow?)

    9. Re:Task Bar?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -6000 Mac TROLL. L4m3!

    10. Re:Task Bar?! by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      In some ways, the OSX interface is a little too cute. I could do without apps on the task bar jumping up and down for attention.

      But for the most part, even though the desktop is doing a lot of things, there is an understated look to the interface that doesn't interfere with what you're trying to do. The desktop isn't saying "ME ME ME!" (except perhaps for those jumping icons)

      Most importantly, we're running OSX 10.5 on a low end G4 with only a gig and a half of memory and a video card two generations behind the one in my PC, and even with all those shading and animation effects, there appears to be little impact on the overall performance of the machine.

      For me at least, OSX loses a point for a few cases of unnecessary cuteness, but more than compensates by providing a satisfying experience on low-end hardware, without me having to search for ways to turn off the special effects.

      That said, we're not a "mac family" for other reasons. Our single Mac is a used box on which we run Garage Band, Photoshop and iTunes. But to overuse the car analogy elsewhere in this thread, Vista reminds me of a Honda Civic in full Riceboi regalia, including garish vinyl decals and fake racing components which look and sound cool but actually degrade performance, and the Mac has always felt more like a low-end Lexus -- not something to turn heads at the stoplight, but thoughtfully designed, well crafted and reliable. Parenthetically, I put up with the interface on the ipod touch because all that unnecessary cuteness doesn't appear to interfere with the performance of the device.

      But this isn't a Mac vs Windows thread. The point is, there's a difference between thoughtfully designed desktop features that improve the workflow, and garish, resource-ravenous eye candy that exist to push the sale more than to make the user more productive. And when you have to upgrade perfectly good hardware just to use the new desktop, it's time to take a hard look at what problem you're actually trying to solve. Are you upgrading just because it's a New Thing, or do you really think animated icons and 3d window stacks will increase your work output more than performance impact will decrease it?

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    11. Re:Task Bar?! by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      I think the biggest reason why Mac OS runs so well even on old video cards is that it doesn't use any pixel shaders like Aero does.

      The Aero glass effect is all pixel shader based, which is what older cards and on-board video struggle with. In Mac OS, the shadows are just alpha transparency maps, and even three or four generation old cards like the Radeon 9200 can churn those out pretty fast.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    12. Re:Task Bar?! by Allador · · Score: 1

      Why are we so concerned about eye-candy? How about the actual system underneath?

      Is it stable, scalable, administrable?

      Compared to XP? Hugely.

      It saddens me when all the supposed 'techies' here on slashdot can only focus on the flash and shiny bits, and dont even look to see what kind of under the hood kernel, scheduler, security, reliability improvements, etc have been made.

      Vista is a massive improvement to the NT kernel and win32.

      The reliability is hugely improved compared to XP. It's scalability at higher end equipment is noticeably better. It deals with weeks or months of standbys & hibernates much more stably than XP did.

      And thats not even getting into the nitty gritty details. I'm tired of repeating them here ad nauseum. Go read wikipedia's entry on technical improvements to Vista. It's quite enlightening.

      This is stuff that MS should have done to the NT line 5-10 years ago, and its good to see them finally doing it.

    13. Re:Task Bar?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vista borders are not transparent, they are translucent. So they can cast a shadow. And even transparent objects cast shadows. For example, take a champagne glass. It's transparent. Do you think it casts no shadow?

    14. Re:Task Bar?! by badkarmadayaccount · · Score: 1

      "Not bloated" means runs acceptable on a i486, or at least a (currently) 5 y.o. laptop if it has to be heavy, at least in any self-respecting nerd's book (i.e. most of slashdot).

      And I know I am an insensitive clod, you self-despising nerds!

      Can you say jump the meme?

      =Smidge

      --
      I know tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack.
  40. Re:Yes, because 2009 IS the year of the Linux desk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He was confused. 2008 was the year of the linux OEM installed netbook. Desktops are dead, laptops outsold desktops last year. These are the years we watch Windows slide into irrelevance, much as Macs did in the US before OSX.
    Do you think the mammals woke up one day and found that all the dinosaurs had gone?

    (Written on an Acer Aspire One netbook, bought in a supermarket, preinstalled with Linux, like millions of others in 2008)

    Let's see MS try to sell a 400 euro minor version upgrade to their OS in the middle of a global economic crisis. I'm sure they'll sell millions, but it's the number of netbooks/nettops that ship with linux that will be key.

  41. Re:Bye bye Linux by HAKdragon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Kind of like how AMD came out with the Athlon XP line around the time that Windows XP shipped?

    --
    "Our opponent is an alien starship packed with atomic bombs. We have a protractor."
  42. Hype and Buzz, Hollywood Style by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remember all the hype and buzz put out by the movie studios before the film totally bombs out at the box office?
    This could be the same with Windows 7.
    They would have to pay me to use this OS after the Vista BS.
    Windows XP, Mac OS 10 or Ubuntu are my Operating Systems now.
    I have 11 authentic copies of Vista and will never install them on another computer again.
    I'm an MCSE that has abandoned Microsoft for Ubuntu.

    1. Re:Hype and Buzz, Hollywood Style by Juln · · Score: 1

      Why the hell do you have 11 copies of Vista?

      --
      Juln
  43. Re:Links to the torrent (for Google impaired folks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah! Let's all perform copyright infringement, information wants to be free, down with the man! (As long as it's not GPL)

  44. It's apparent by HangingChad · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's apparent that Windows 7 represents a radical name change from Vista. A bold new direction in OS branding.

    And people say innovation is dead in Redmond.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
  45. Poorly implemented javascript = bad by coryking · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You can write javascript that enhances a page. One can quickly write an implementation that keeps each image a standard page (good for SEO, good for multi-tab) but can also swap the image and not reload the page. Then you can right-click "Open new tab" or just click on it and not refresh the entire page.

    Javascript = good.
    Shitty Javascript = bad.

    1. Re:Poorly implemented javascript = bad by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      Except that they don't care about multi-tab and SEO, they care about making you load another page so they get an ad impression. Trust me, I work for a major network and we do have directives to make things require as many page views as possible.

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
    2. Re:Poorly implemented javascript = bad by aliquis · · Score: 1

      Ok, I guess my problem is that all pages using javascript is shitty then.

    3. Re:Poorly implemented javascript = bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, I guess my problem is that all pages using javascript is shitty then.

      Slashdot's comment system says hi...

      It is a pretty good system too IMO...

  46. Is it Better? by LennyP · · Score: 0

    My first, and only question is: If I replace XP/SP3 on my machine with Windows 7 nee Vista will my hardware and applications perform any better? The only improvement I've ever seen in a usoft upgrade was SP3 for XP which did have a small performance increase under certain conditions.

  47. What is a beta by drolli · · Score: 1

    > This is the kind of code that you could roll out and live with.

    Yes, that is the definition of a beta. A beta should find bugs of minor importance which only appear in real use cases.

    The final version does not have the "you could live with" phrase in the end.

  48. Shame is not a good aphrodisiac by hwyhobo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The "Mojave is really Vista" campaign was one of the most embarassing marketing campaigns I've ever seen. Here is a company that willingly admits that the reputation of their OS is so terrible, they have to dupe people into trying it by renaming it something else. And now the same "I'm so embarrassed by my product I won't even mention its name" continues.

    What happened to Microsoft's cojones? They should stand up and fight for Vista until its reputation is at least partly restored. Then they could introduce products under new names, without the overhanging cloud of shame.

    As for the "review", this part is enough to make me laugh uncontrollably: "Here are some screenshots to whet your appetite:". What is this, a review of a new cellphone skin for teenagers hanging out at a mall? What is happening to ZDNet? Not that it ever was a source of great knowledge, but this?

    --
    End anonymous moderation and posting on /.
    1. Re:Shame is not a good aphrodisiac by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      Every review of every application and OS includes screenshots, because that's what people who want to have a quick look want to see. And a proper review will take a long time of use and writing to write. Looks like the writer just wanted to get a preview out real quick and called it a review.

      --
      This space for rent.
    2. Re:Shame is not a good aphrodisiac by hwyhobo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      that's what people who want to have a quick look want to see

      Is it? I must not be "in", because that is the last thing I am interested in when reading an operating system review. For whatever bizarre reason, I would rather know about:

      1. reliability
      2. compatibility with existing applications
      3. networking tools
      4. management features
      --
      End anonymous moderation and posting on /.
  49. Features? by loconet · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Over 100 comments and we still don't have a concise list of substantial features Windows 7 offers over Vista? As someone else pointed out, a name and theme change does not really qualify as substantial change. Ok, so WinFS was never promised for this version. What exactly are they offering this time besides a fix to the taskbar? I have yet to see an article that outlines changes outside the UI. Is this an elaborate prank?

    --
    [alk]
    1. Re:Features? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    2. Re:Features? by swilver · · Score: 1

      Obviously, they want the name changed, since people are so stupid to believe the name actually means something.

    3. Re:Features? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It connects to WiFi much faster and resumes that conx from suspend much faster. Huge win. UI for Wifi is much improved too.

  50. Sounds to me like a pebkac by denzacar · · Score: 2, Informative

    The Trojan had worked its way onto her computer via a P2P program that her daughter was using to get music

    A female kind. Probably underage.

    Those are hard to get rid off. It usually takes years before you get the ship em off to college or marry em off.

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
  51. It wasn't user training by coryking · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What failed was developer training, not user training. Developers could basically assume a user was running root. That let them take shortcuts like writing shit to "Program Files" or messing around with system files.

    You have to understand the history as well. Microsoft grew up as a single-user OS and slowly morphed into a multi-user OS. They didn't grow up with the culture that unix-like systems have where the system was assumed to be multi-user.

    Bottom line is we will always need some variant of sudo (aka UAC). UAC is actually the best sudo implementation there is so far, at least in my opinion. Granted, there is still room for improvement, but that mainly lies in "integration". For example, the common dialogs need a way for me to load notepad.exe, edit "C:\Windows\System32\Drivers\Etc\Hosts", and give me a UAC prompt when I save the file. That way I don't have to remember to load notepad.exe with elevated privileges. Let me write a new file to a protected directory and UAC me then instead loading the app with elevated privileges. That kind of integration will make the new world of "dont run as root" more enjoyable. The goal is to make it so there is no excuse for nerds to disable UAC (thus running as root 24/7).

    1. Re:It wasn't user training by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      You have to understand the history as well. Microsoft grew up as a single-user OS and slowly morphed into a multi-user OS. They didn't grow up with the culture that unix-like systems have where the system was assumed to be multi-user.

      Perhaps you should go back to history class. one of Microsoft's first non-lanugage products was Microsoft Xenix, a System V based OS that was later sold to some company nobody ever heard of called SCO. Microsoft was doing multi-user before Apple even had a GUI or Linux even existed.

    2. Re:It wasn't user training by Wo1ke · · Score: 1

      He obviously meant Windows.

    3. Re:It wasn't user training by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      I seriously doubt that Microsoft Xenix ever had more than one user.

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
  52. Re:Same Desktop UI model we've had for the last 15 by recoiledsnake · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Microsoft changed the interface of Office 2007 to make it much better all around(atleast for casual and new users). Look at the bad rap that it gave them on here and elsewhere for being unfamiliar to power users and people who are used to toolbars and 'File,Edit,View' menus. Look at what happened to KDE 4.0 And you want MS to radically alter the UI of a OS with 90% market share? Can you imagine the comments here starting with 'My grandma who used Windows since 95 got Windows 7 and.....' ? I bet the ribbonish interface itself in Windows 7 will not be well received by some people.

    --
    This space for rent.
  53. It's like the Wall Street Bailout... by elecmahm · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I can't help but shake the same feeling that I had when the Wall Street was being pushed through Congress... the first time around, EVERYONE hated it (except some of the Dems) but the second time around they "marketed" it better, the media said "oh it's SOOOOO different this time, you'll LOVE it" and then people said "well, I guess it's ok. let's try it" Isn't that basically the same thing that's going on here? MS says "Oh, pox on Vista, you want Windows 7, that's where it's at!" Whoever it was that earlier said they turn off all the UI snazziness on XP -- I totally echo that sentiment -- I use "classic view" and pretty much the only reason I switched to XP was for some of the performance and native-driver issues (and for software compatibility). Having a flashy OS doesn't make me want to buy it, because if it did, I would buy Mac. (Or install Ubuntu again)

    1. Re:It's like the Wall Street Bailout... by Shados · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      One thing is that with Vista, most people who "hate" it never tried it, or was cursed with a poor OEM install. Nothing's wrong with the actual OS. So once you have Windows 7, which -is- much better than Vista, on top of the fact that Vista is just great, but people don't realize it... When you give Windows 7 to a supposed "Vista hater", you end up with "2" levels of improvement, making them think its just "one". So of course the reaction is quite positive.

    2. Re:It's like the Wall Street Bailout... by mustafap · · Score: 1

      Bollocks.

      In my house we have XP and Vista - Vista only on my wife's laptop. XP on the other four machines.

      I have nothing but grief with the Vista laptop. Doesn't like my printers, crappy 'you are an idiot' user interface, trouble with existing programs, it just goes on. I'd say at this point that installing Linux is less hassle than dealing with the fallout of a Vista machine in the house.

      --
      Open Source Drum Kit, LPLC deve board - mjhdesigns.com
    3. Re:It's like the Wall Street Bailout... by rcastro0 · · Score: 1

      >I have nothing but grief with the Vista laptop.

      Tell me about it. Vista made me buy a new wireless router.

      I had a perfectly functioning Liksys BEFW11S4, supporting all my needs for many years. When I bought a laptop which came with Visa -- no luck connecting! After much time searching the internet for help, I came to the conclusion that Vista simply does not work with it, period. Although the BEFW11S4 is a fully standard Wireless-B router. Went out, got a new Linksys, guess the perfectly good old one will end at a landfill, thanks to MS.

      --
      Quem a paca cara compra, paca cara pagará.
    4. Re:It's like the Wall Street Bailout... by Jamie's+Nightmare · · Score: 1

      ...I came to the conclusion that Vista simply does not work with it, period.

      You came to that conclusion, but that doesn't make it right. I've had no trouble with my Linux router with Vista on my desktop and laptop machines. I did have trouble, with a horrible wireless configuration utility made by some idiots at Broadcom that would cause explorer to hang when the control panel applet was loaded. Never trust a program with an Icon that looks like it was made with MS Paint.

      Back on target, it's entirely possible that shoddy drivers are the reason you had problems. The OS being changed was only coincidental.

      --
      "When you see a unixer brainwashed beyond saving, kick him out of the door." - Xah Lee
  54. Time settings on your Win 3.11 box... by denzacar · · Score: 1

    ... seems to be off.
    Just bring up the DOS prompt and fix it using time and date commands. It is faster the clicking around through the program manager.

    Current date is December 28, 2008. Not sure about your local time.
    You might have some small problems convincing your computer that it is 2008 if it is not Y2K compatible though.

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    1. Re:Time settings on your Win 3.11 box... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      I have a PC that says the year is 2094. Clearly it is from the future. This does not bode well, as it's a buggy P90 (well, a P75 with delusions of grandeur).

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    2. Re:Time settings on your Win 3.11 box... by denzacar · · Score: 1

      Check its browser cash. It might contain lotto numbers or stock reports from the future.

      Not much use to you (unless cryogenic tech booms in next couple of years) - but your grandkids would love to have that info.
      Maybe you could blackmail them to clone you or something?

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
    3. Re:Time settings on your Win 3.11 box... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      That's a good idea. I'll get right on it!!

      And while I'm there, I'll look for data on that immortality thing that's supposed to happen in the next few decades. Grandchildren will just have to fend for themselves.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  55. I can name one thing that would help by coryking · · Score: 1

    Some how create a way for .NET apps that are compiled as "Any CPU" to call libraries compiled as x86.

    If you compile a .NET app as "Any CPU" the runtime will take your MSIL and compile it to the native instruction set of the CPU. That means if you are running 64-bit, it will compile 64-bit. If you run 32-bit, it will compile 32-bit. The problem is, a 64-bit library cannot call a 32-bit one. Thus if you compile "Any CPU" and try calling a 32-bit library when you run on a 64-bit system, .NET will throw an exception.

    So what do most people do? Compile their .NET apps as 32-bit. Then they know it will run everywhere.

    Now, I'm no expert in 32/64-bit issues, but it seems to be if Microsoft had a way for .NET apps compiled for "Any CPU" to transparently deal with 32/64-bit libraries, you'd see more 64-bit apps. Again, I'm no expert and there are probably some pretty good reasons this is hard, if not impossible, to do.

    If I was boss, I'd also make it so a single 32-bit installer could detect what CPU you've got and install 64-bit binaries or 32-bit automatically. From what I can tell, right now you pretty much have to ship two installers--one for 64-bit and one for 32-bit.

    1. Re:I can name one thing that would help by maird · · Score: 1

      If a Windows installer built the application on the box instead of copying pre-built binaries to the box then there wouldn't be a 32 bit/64 bit schism on Windows. This is why 64 bit is not an issue on linux. Junta's comment above about Adobe and Sun is well made but I feel comfortable believing that a 64 bit port is a lot easier for them on Linux than it is on Windows.

      Of course, it comes back to whether application authors are ready to publish their source. It also would help if Microsoft was ready to make the compiler part of the platform - I know they publish free compilers but they are whole application stacks rather than utilities in the system directory - arguably disintegrated development environments :-)

      I suspect there are very few real secrets in software and most of it is too complicated for it to be practical to cut and paste (i.e. steal) significant functionality. The upside of building on the box for commercial software companies is that they may end up employing developers they don't have to pay.

    2. Re:I can name one thing that would help by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      If a Windows installer built the application on the box instead of copying pre-built binaries to the box then there wouldn't be a 32 bit/64 bit schism on Windows. This is why 64 bit is not an issue on linux.

      Well, no, it's not. Most Linux distros have binary packages, not source.

      The reason why there are far more 64-bit native apps on Linux is that sources are available in general, not because apps are compiled on the client machine upon installation.

      That said, with .NET, apps can still be native for whatever architecture the client is using, without redistributing the source (short of the problem GP is describing).

    3. Re:I can name one thing that would help by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Now, I'm no expert in 32/64-bit issues, but it seems to be if Microsoft had a way for .NET apps compiled for "Any CPU" to transparently deal with 32/64-bit libraries, you'd see more 64-bit apps. Again, I'm no expert and there are probably some pretty good reasons this is hard, if not impossible, to do.

      It is possible, but it's pretty tricky to get right, and it breaks a lot of things. The reasons are the same as why 32-bit browser plugins for a long time couldn't run in 64-bit browsers, on both Windows and Linux. Linux browsers have workarounds these days (as I understand, they simply run the plugins in their own separate process, and use an IPC shim to communicate with the browser), but this is not a universal solution.

      In case of .NET, it all depends on what kind of native calls you're doing. If you're just calling the Windows system DLLs, then you're fine - you'll get 64-bit versions of them on a 64-bit OS, so you can still safely set the platform to AnyCPU. If you call the DLLs that you build yourself (e.g. some performance-sensitive code written in C++), then just build both 32-bit and 64-bit versions, and install one or another depending on the OS. If you use a 3rd-party DLL which is 32-bit only, bug the developer of that DLL.

      If I was boss, I'd also make it so a single 32-bit installer could detect what CPU you've got and install 64-bit binaries or 32-bit automatically.

      It is fairly straightforward to write a simple MSI custom action that does that, and then use its output as a conditional to install one or another set of binaries.

    4. Re:I can name one thing that would help by CommentThingSucks · · Score: 1

      It doesn't work that way. In many applications there are real portability problems that prevent them from just being recompiled as 64-bit. It isn't as big an issue on Linux because someone took time to make sure the application worked on 64-bit. Companies like Adobe likely have a lot of code that is poorly structured and very tied to a specific architecture.

  56. Benchmarks vs. XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm getting really tired of all the /. bitching and moaning over every little thing Microsoft does, so I'd like to go ahead and point you all to benchmarks showing that not only is Windows 7 faster than Vista, but also XP SP3.

    http://blogs.zdnet.com/hardware/?p=3187

    And look at that, it's even an older, slower build than the latest one.

    1. Re:Benchmarks vs. XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stop whining! You're nothing but a crier boy! A CRIER BOY!

  57. Did you turn off Aero? by coryking · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Most nerds seem to turn it off assuming it is "flasy useless eye candy". Little do they know they basically turned off hardware accelleration. You do know that Vista, with Aero enabled, will delegate most of the window drawing to the video card. In fact, the more ram on your video card, the better, Vista stores all the window data on that instead of your system RAM.

    If you've got a card that does DirectX10 it will even hand the fonts to the video card and let the video card deal with font rendering and caching. Once you turn off Aero, the video card is just an old-school video card. Since a certain set of nerds seem to hate nice looking things, I bet most of them turn off the one thing that makes Vista way more snappy than XP--Aero.

    1. Re:Did you turn off Aero? by John+Betonschaar · · Score: 5, Informative

      Non-aero window drawing is also hardware-accelerated, just not 3D hardware accelerated. And it has been like that since Windows 9x or something.

      Your computer isn't going to be more responsive by adding extra load on the GPU, only (possibly) prettier. Which is kind of subjective, I for one think Vista looks like multi-colored poo that gets in the way of working with the computer.

    2. Re:Did you turn off Aero? by yoyhed · · Score: 1

      Aero is indeed nice: it's noticeably smoother moving around windows than in XP. I'm with you 100% - why do these people hate the fact that their otherwise idling video card is being used for something to make it better?

      --
      WHO NEEDS SHIFT WHEN YOU HAVE CAPSLOCK/ DAMN1
    3. Re:Did you turn off Aero? by Archangel_Azazel · · Score: 1

      Yes it's nice. Yes it's pretty. People aren't complaining that they're using their video card. They're complaining that Vista runs like shit on their mostly new system and they don't want to have to go out and get a top-of-the-line system JUST TO HAVE A PRETTY INTERFACE.

      I should not have to upgrade my system just because you wanted my os to look nicer. Hey MSFT, how about first concentrating on making the fucking thing WORK instead of "OOOOH SHINY!!!"? ...I think it's time to give my shift key a break!

      A.A.M

      --
      Your mind is like a parachute. It works best when it's been opened.
    4. Re:Did you turn off Aero? by Plaid+Phantom · · Score: 1

      Because they don't have a powerful video card? Or don't want their video card using up power unnecessarily?

      --
      All comments are properties and trademarks of the voices in my head. Not like I'm gonna claim them.
    5. Re:Did you turn off Aero? by bhpaddock · · Score: 2, Informative

      You are incorrect in numerous ways.

      First, Windows Vista does not support 2D acceleration, as the new WDDM 1.0 driver model doesn't allow it. That means all the GDI acceleration in Windows XP is gone. However, for the desktop and window manager this is offset by the fact that the new window manager makes use of 3D acceleration, which is very richly supported by the new driver model.

      Second, many tasks will feel faster with composition enabled. For instance, dragging a window around the screen on Windows XP will cause a great deal of CPU usage. On Windows Vista with the DWM running, there is virtually none.

      Finally, since the desktop is composited, it allows for a higher quality and more robust user experience. When a window is hung, the window manager can continue to show the last state of the window (and can even "frost" it over to show that it is not responding), and can still allow it to be dragged around even though the window itself has stopped pumping messages.

      Note that Windows 7's new WDDM 1.1 driver model brings back a lot of the 2D GDI acceleration that was missing in Vista.

    6. Re:Did you turn off Aero? by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      What good is that when a lot of people now have rubbish video cards that share system memory?

    7. Re:Did you turn off Aero? by WiiVault · · Score: 1

      I would hardly call Aero's poor OS X knockoff a "nice looking thing". While you are correct about the GPU offloading on most rigs Aero is still slower than classic. Of course that is changing as hardware improves, but it is still not impressive.

    8. Re:Did you turn off Aero? by PixetaledPikachu · · Score: 1

      why do these people hate the fact that their otherwise idling video card is being used for something to make it better?

      There you go. for YOU, the shiny vista GUI is better than XP. I don't think so.

    9. Re:Did you turn off Aero? by yoyhed · · Score: 1

      1) You don't need a powerful video card, and 2) if you don't have even the equivalent of integrated Intel graphics, you can turn Aero off..

      --
      WHO NEEDS SHIFT WHEN YOU HAVE CAPSLOCK/ DAMN1
    10. Re:Did you turn off Aero? by Bungie · · Score: 1

      Yes it's nice. Yes it's pretty. People aren't complaining that they're using their video card. They're complaining that Vista runs like shit on their mostly new system and they don't want to have to go out and get a top-of-the-line system JUST TO HAVE A PRETTY INTERFACE.

      If you have a mostly new system (even an older system) then Vista will run on it. If your system doesn't support Aero then it will use normal 2D themes on your card (even using the Standard VGA Adapter driver). It runs fine and is fully usable, even on older hardware.

      I should not have to upgrade my system just because you wanted my os to look nicer. Hey MSFT, how about first concentrating on making the fucking thing WORK instead of "OOOOH SHINY!!!"?

      Suprisingly they did concentrate on making a lot of things work and added a lot more to it than just the shiny. It works really well, and in my opinion works much better than XP ever did.

      --
      The clash of honour calls, to stand when others fall.
    11. Re:Did you turn off Aero? by beav007 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I have customers who have bought laptops with Vista, and regretted it. Going back to the Windows Classic theme has increased GUI responsiveness on every single one, no exceptions.

    12. Re:Did you turn off Aero? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're wrong. Most nerds don't turn off aero.

    13. Re:Did you turn off Aero? by kv9 · · Score: 1

      Since a certain set of nerds seem to hate nice looking things [...]

      the Fisher Price bullshit they pulled with XP was pretty bad, but the Vista look is just horrible. if you think it's "nice looking" you must be fucking 12.

    14. Re:Did you turn off Aero? by Daengbo · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure MS is being sued for claiming that integrated Intel graphics were "capable" of running Vista. ;)

    15. Re:Did you turn off Aero? by Nicolay77 · · Score: 1

      AFAIK the latest Nvidia cards do not have 2D hardware acceleration anymore.

      --
      We are Turing O-Machines. The Oracle is out there.
    16. Re:Did you turn off Aero? by pointsofdata · · Score: 1

      Did they have dedicated graphics cards?Because I read somewhere that aero uses the gpu instead of cpu, if it is available.

    17. Re:Did you turn off Aero? by Furan · · Score: 1

      This is half true.

      The window backbuffer in Vista is stored both in system and video memory. And GDI is not hardware accelerated anymore. Note that at this point it makes less and less sense as we are able to do things faster on the cpu, so any hardware acceleration only has the utility of being able to keep the surfaces near the hardware (in video memory).

      With Windows 7 and WDDM 1.1, the window backbuffer is almost always in video memory, and some GDI DDIs are once again accelerated to facilitate that locality.

      Either way though you're better off with the DWM on than off.

    18. Re:Did you turn off Aero? by phatvw · · Score: 1

      Most nerds seem to turn it off assuming it is "flasy useless eye candy". Little do they know they basically turned off hardware accelleration. You do know that Vista, with Aero enabled, will delegate most of the window drawing to the video card. In fact, the more ram on your video card, the better, Vista stores all the window data on that instead of your system RAM.

      In Vista there are actually multiple copies of the "window data" in BOTH system and Video ram. That's one reason why dwm.exe commit size is so large in Vista.

      If you have a WDDM 1.1 compatible video card in Windows 7, however, the memory savings is huge. Especially if you frequently have a lot of windows open simultaneously. All this was presented at WinHEC/PDC. All of this means that you can actually run Win7 with 1GB quite well without any disk thrashing. You can certainly run WinXP with 1GB or less, but you don't get all the cool stuff that all kids love.

      So how do you know if your current Video card is WDDM 1.1 compatible? From looking at the INF files distributed with the BETA, you can deduce that any DirectX 10 capable card is also WDDM 1.1. Presumably the graphics guidelines for Windows 7 system builders will be published soon to verify this. Until then, get your latest WDDM 1.1 drivers from Windows Update Catalog

  58. Re:Same Desktop UI model we've had for the last 15 by synthesizerpatel · · Score: 1

    You bring up a good point, but my assertion isn't that we need to necessarily change the environment from what it is to something else entirely or partially.

    Providing skinning abilities, or UI modularity (ala Glade for GTK and NIBs for OSX), such that you could eliminate or add elements to your UI -- the buttons and widgets simply pair up with under the hood events that get fired off based on events.

    That way you could ship the 'same old' for the people who like it, and individuals could experiment with what they like 'more'.

      Office 2007 probably isn't the best example of 'new design' in terms of success or failure -- Office long ago stopped being anything more than a dumping ground for committee sourced features that have nothing to do with providing a functional word processing environment -- rather catering/pandering to the perceived marketing requirements of the entire spectrum of users from amateur to pro. (Although for your post it's a good example of 'Hey you guys changed my thing!')

  59. Ask and ye shall receive by coryking · · Score: 2, Informative

    What you ask exists. Vista Virtual Store. Basically, if your crappy app writes to "C:\program files" in vista and you are running as a standard user, Vista will do exactly what you describe... it will redirect the file IO to a place owned by the user, not the system.

    1. Re:Ask and ye shall receive by rastilin · · Score: 2, Informative

      I am aware that this exists, but not to the needed extent. There's two problems with what they're doing.

      1. It's a hassle to find the files. They're hidden away in a bunch of sub-directories I had to drill down to get to. Even then, I couldn't find all of the stuff I was looking for when I needed to back my Vista system up manually.
      2. It doesn't work all the time, it works for some apps, but seems to fail for others.

      --
      How do you kill that which has no life?
  60. Oh really? by coryking · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Your computer isn't going to be more responsive by adding extra load on the GPU, only (possibly) prettier.

    You are telling me that there is no performance improvement in having a *graphics card* handle *graphics* instead of a CPU? You are telling me that rather then having to load a window from system RAM to the video card RAM every time you maximize or minimize a window is faster then storing both on the video card ram and then sending a quick set of commands to the GPU?

    You do realize that in most cases, when you minimize a window in Vista, the GPU still keeps a fully rendered version of the "normal" size window in its memory? You do realize that that trick lets you hover over the taskbar and see "tail -f /var/log/messages" in PuTTY console while the thing is minimized, right? Can your CPU and the system memory do that? Turn Aero off and you loose all that, and eat more system memory.

    We have powerful video cards these days and only a fool wouldn't exploit them to speed up the windowing system. Me thinks some are too blinded by hate and narrow imagination to appreciate cool things.

    1. Re:Oh really? by John+Betonschaar · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No I'm telling you video cards from 10 years back already provide hardware accelerated blitting (even translucent), filling, rectangle drawing, etc. So your desktop _is_ hardware accelarated by the video card without anything Aero, and it has been like this for years.

      Of course you don't get all the fancy shader tricks but like I said, not everyone actually appreciates those.

    2. Re:Oh really? by hairyfeet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You are telling me that I should WANT an OS that requires the freaking GPU just to draw the desktop without running like a slug? Really? Let us not forget people: We are talking about an OPERATING SYSTEM here, not the latest bloateware 3D game. I just want the OS to freaking boot and then get the hell out of my way so I can run MY programs. I don't need nor want your "flippin 3D super desktop search live enabled web 3.0" crap in my OS! Just freaking start and move! Is that really so freaking hard?

      I ran just about every kind of Vista out there, from beta 1 through SP1. And do you know which one WASN'T a giant resource hogging web 3.0 bloated piggy? A freaking pirated version where they had stripped the living hell out of it so much the entire OS fit onto a CD. I might have stayed with it if the driver support for my hardware didn't suck. Instead I'm using good old ever reliable WinXP Pro. But if Win7 is more of the Vista "We want to be Apple so damned much it hurts!" crap I have a feeling I am going to be running XP for a LONG time. I am just glad I build my own desktops and getting motherboards with 2K/XP drivers is pretty much standard issue.

      And if any of the guys from MSFT are reading this: STOP trying to be Apple! If I would have wanted a freaking Apple I would have bought one,okay? You are a business company, NOT a home entertainment company. Make a decent low resource using business OS and stop trying to be "Steve Jobs Jr" because frankly it is embarrassing. Allow me to make a prediction: If you force everyone to get rid of their quicklaunch and taskbar and replace it with a freaking dock(gee, I wonder where you got THAT idea from?) then all you are going to do is severely piss off your customers who will either: Stay with XP,move to a Mac,or go to Linux. And I apologize if this came off a little ranty, but ever since that monkey Ballmer took over it seems like they are going out of their way to destroy themselves trying to be Apple. Vista, Zune,I'm sure others can point out even more Apple envy. They are really turning what was once a solid business OS into a giant media oriented mess. And give up the crazy MPAA DRM already! They are NEVER going to pick you over Apple because EVERYBODY has a freaking iPod!

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    3. Re:Oh really? by Archangel_Azazel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      --Instead I'm using good old ever reliable WinXP Pro--

      I can't believe I'm reading that. I was in the tech support industry when XP came out. It was a *NIGHTMARE*. It seems that MSFT's way of business is to have a product in beta for 3/4 of it's "service life" then when they FINALLY work out all the bugs in the damn thing THEY DON'T SUPPORT IT ANYMORE.

      I agree with you on most of your points though. I still miss the days when winblows was exactly what it should be now : AN APPLICATION. Leave the OS to do what it's supposed to be doing...BEING AN OS instead of a one-click bloated pos.

      A.A.M

      --
      Your mind is like a parachute. It works best when it's been opened.
    4. Re:Oh really? by Kalriath · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I agree with you on most of your points though. I still miss the days when winblows was exactly what it should be now : AN APPLICATION. Leave the OS to do what it's supposed to be doing...BEING AN OS instead of a one-click bloated pos.

      You mean like Windows Server 2008 Core? It's where the thing installs to like 300MB or something and isn't even CAPABLE of doing most of those tasks you don't think an OS should be doing.

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
    5. Re:Oh really? by Draek · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You are telling me that there is no performance improvement in having a *graphics card* handle *graphics* instead of a CPU?

      When the CPU runs at 3+ Ghz and the graphic in question is a 2 Mpx, simple 2D image? fuck no, there isn't. The difference in performance only starts when you add the idiotic extra 'flash', but no modern (or even not-so-modern) computer should have any trouble displaying a Win2K-like interface regardless of the GPU.

      We have powerful video cards these days and only a fool wouldn't exploit them to speed up the windowing system. Me thinks some are too blinded by hate and narrow imagination to appreciate cool things.

      Not all of us *have* powerful video cards, and despite your own blind hate and narrow imagination, plenty of us prefer simpler interfaces rather than the garish piece of shit that's Vista's default theme.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    6. Re:Oh really? by hairyfeet · · Score: 5, Interesting

      EXACTLY! I tried Server 2K8 and I was like "Why? Why in the hell can't you just add a basic GUI on top of this and sell it to business users for the desktop? Why?" It is low resource,doesn't have tons of bloated multimedia junk that has NO business being in a business OS, and runs solid as a rock. So why can't those of use who just want to get our work done buy this on a machine without shelling out insane money for a server license? Why?

      And as for the one who marked me troll, accept it: Vista is a flop. It is a giant festering turd of fail that the general public can't get away from fast enough. Why do you think EVERY single ad we see and every blog is either "I'm a PC" or Win7? Because MSFT knows that wasting more money on Vista is pointless because the public has spoken and they don't want it. For those of you that have gotten Vista to work or like it,congratulations! You are in the minority! I have sold more machines in this past year and a half and built more custom PCs than I have in the 15 years I have been in PC repair. Why? Because folks are happy to shell out extra money to me so they DON'T have to take Vista. I have been working with MSFT products since the days of Win3.1 and I have NEVER seen folks go so far out of their way to avoid a MSFT OS, even during the horror that was WinME.

      Sadly from what I have seen of Win7 instead of learning from their mistakes and going back to their roots and making a solid, backwards compatible, low resource business OS they are instead going to pile even MORE bling bling on top and then really insult the customers by getting rid of quicklaunch and replacing it with an Apple Dock which they will probably screw up on the implementation anyway. I swear if I didn't know any better I would think Ballmer was trying to burn the company down on purpose. I just don't get who exactly they are trying to please. The home users HATE change, the gamers want an OS that sucks as little CPU and GPU as possible to give them better FPS and the business owners want low resource usage so they don't need expensive hardware along with backwards compatibility with all their old business apps. So who exactly are they pleasing with this desire to copy all things Apple? Because from the way my customers are happy to shell out for even older off lease business machines just so they can have XP over Vista it sure ain't them.

      The one nice thing about all this is we may finally see real competition brought back into the OS market like we had in the 80's. Because I have the sinking feeling that Win7 is going to make MSFT customers run away even worse than Vista did. Oh, and before someone points out the Vista sales numbers please note that ALL Vista downgrades are counted NOT as an XP purchase but as a Vista sale. And you know it is popular when even Tigerdirect is using "Includes XP Downgrade rights!!" in giant letters as a selling point.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    7. Re:Oh really? by daath93 · · Score: 1

      Have you tried DOS?

    8. Re:Oh really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are telling me that I should WANT an OS that requires the freaking GPU just to draw the desktop without running like a slug? Really? Let us not forget people: We are talking about an OPERATING SYSTEM here, not the latest bloateware 3D game. I just want the OS to freaking boot and then get the hell out of my way so I can run MY programs. I don't need nor want your "flippin 3D super desktop search live enabled web 3.0" crap in my OS! Just freaking start and move! Is that really so freaking hard?

      I ran just about every kind of Vista out there, from beta 1 through SP1. And do you know which one WASN'T a giant resource hogging web 3.0 bloated piggy? A freaking pirated version where they had stripped the living hell out of it so much the entire OS fit onto a CD. I might have stayed with it if the driver support for my hardware didn't suck. Instead I'm using good old ever reliable WinXP Pro. But if Win7 is more of the Vista "We want to be Apple so damned much it hurts!" crap I have a feeling I am going to be running XP for a LONG time. I am just glad I build my own desktops and getting motherboards with 2K/XP drivers is pretty much standard issue.

      And if any of the guys from MSFT are reading this: STOP trying to be Apple! If I would have wanted a freaking Apple I would have bought one,okay? You are a business company, NOT a home entertainment company. Make a decent low resource using business OS and stop trying to be "Steve Jobs Jr" because frankly it is embarrassing. Allow me to make a prediction: If you force everyone to get rid of their quicklaunch and taskbar and replace it with a freaking dock(gee, I wonder where you got THAT idea from?) then all you are going to do is severely piss off your customers who will either: Stay with XP,move to a Mac,or go to Linux. And I apologize if this came off a little ranty, but ever since that monkey Ballmer took over it seems like they are going out of their way to destroy themselves trying to be Apple. Vista, Zune,I'm sure others can point out even more Apple envy. They are really turning what was once a solid business OS into a giant media oriented mess. And give up the crazy MPAA DRM already! They are NEVER going to pick you over Apple because EVERYBODY has a freaking iPod!

      I don't have a /. account otherwise I'd post under that account. I am not signing up for an account over this comment.

      I personally have to disagree with hairyfeet about how an OS should magically be snappy, load up the basics, get out of the way and let me run my programs. First of all, any Windows OS can do exactly what you are griping about. Just because every Tom, Dick and Jane bought a Dell laptop or HP PC from Best Buy that has windows loaded with everything is what I am assuming you are basing your opinion on. As a matter of fact, if you are as geeky with computers as the impression you are trying to display, you would then know that the OS needs tweaking like any other non Windows OS. Seriously, that is why there are Microsoft Certified partners, certificate programs, etc. Yeah, the Apples of the world make computers stupid for people who want a computer but don't take the time to want to know how to use it other than some canned software programs. Point is that if you want any OS to be snappy, light weight and bloat free, you need to configure it. Or you could use the wizard...

      Finally, I felt the needs to defend Server 2008. While I do admit that I have seen slower desktops load XP faster that Server 2008, I will say it does load pretty quick for a Server OS. Ever boot up an 2003 SBS server with just about everything loaded? Takes forever. Does Server 2008 beat 2003? IMHO, yes. BTW, using Server 2008 and setting it up are two different things, If you actually get a chance to try it, you will know that from the install you are allowed to choose the server roles before completing the OS install so there is no "bloat". I have not used the Server 2008 from the command prompt only, but I do know that you can install 2008 so it only runs from the command line and does not start a GUI at all. Feel free to look this up.

      Not snappy != crappy

      My 2 cents.

    9. Re:Oh really? by wintermute000 · · Score: 1

      Er, backward compatible is the precise reason for MS bloat and breakage.

      They needed to clear the deadwood and enforce it with an iron hand. Unfortunately they only went halfway with Vista. In fact with so many (poorly) written custom apps out there I'm not even sure if it is possible to do an OSX type 'rebirth'.

    10. Re:Oh really? by hairyfeet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Uuuh.....did you actually bother to READ my other post? I said Server 2K8 was a GREAT OS and that they should have put a WinNT style GUI on top of THAT and sold it as a business desktop instead of the nightmare of a home OS that is Vista. Now can you HONESTLY tell me that you think Vista was built with the business user in mind? Up until now they took a rock solid business OS and then stripped out a few business centric add ons and you had the home version(like XP Pro and Home) or they took a great server OS like Win2K server and simply stripped it down to make a rock solid basic desktop like Win2K Pro. This is the first time we have seen them try to shovel a HOME operating system onto the business user. Is there anyone who can look at Vista and think it was built for anything OTHER than multimedia? Hell the thing has bling bling coming out its butt!

      And I haven't actually bought a retail machine in ages BTW. All my operating systems are retail or OEM and I build the hardware myself. If I need a laptop it boots long enough to see that the hardware works and get imaged in case I need to return it then it is wiped-no exceptions. And believe me I know about having to tweak a MSFT OS, it comes with the turf. Hell I still have the DOS commands for Win9x to copy the CD and install from HDD memorized. And while the machine I used for Vista wasn't anything top of the line, it should have been MORE than enough to handle it. let us not forget we are talking about an OS, not an application. I shut down UAC, I turned off indexing, I downloaded and ran every Vista tweaking utility I could find as well as editing the reg with suggestions from every Vista tweaks site I could find. What did I get on this 3.6GHz P4 with 2Gb of RAM and a 6200 followed by a 7600 graphics card?

      Slow as a slug, hell it reminded me of the days when folks would put Win95 on a 286, it was that painful. A HDD that thrashed all the time and finally gave out from the strain, a network that would die if you looked at it funny, file transfers that were awful(and this was after SP1, before SP1 I would burn a DVD to move a file 3 feet because the network was too damned slow), freezes for 10-25 seconds for no damned reason whatsoever,2 or 3 times a week it would either BSOD or just vaporlock,hell I could probably go on all day. And from talking with my customers and checking forums I know that I am FAR from alone. Compare that to the SAME hardware on XP SP3-under 45 second boot from cold, extremely responsive, fast network transfers, not a single loss of connectivity or a single BSOD, no freezes, no thrashing, just a well functioning stable OS.

      I have owned, ran, sold, and fixed every MSFT OS since Win3.1. And i REALLY wanted to like Vista, I really really did. This isn't some Linux or Apple zealot trying to spread FUD here. I even ran the beta hoping that I could help fix the bugs and make it a better OS. But they didn't build an OS for me. They didn't build an OS for the business users, or the gamers, or even the home users, because they HATE change. No, they built an OS for those inside MSFT that want to take over Apple's turf, and frankly it shows. Vista is an OS that IMHO just screams "I can be as cool as an Apple Mac! No really I can!". The problems with that are MSFT customers didn't want an Apple, they just wanted a new Windows, Apple knows how to have pretty without dragging down the OS and MSFT don't, MSFT owes a LOT to business customers who they frankly burned real bad with the lousy backwards compatibility and high hardware requirements of Vista, and finally that the home users absolutely HATE change and Vista is frankly change for change sake.

      I truly hope they change for Win7, I really do. I hope they put out a low resource, rock solid stable business OS instead of seeing posts all over the place on how to turn Server 2K8 into a desktop just so you can have a MSFT business OS. But from what I have seen of the beta it screams "But I REALLY can be a Mac this time! I Promise!", and if they are going to force me to run a Mac clone anyway then why the hell shouldn't I just get a Mac?

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    11. Re:Oh really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      slugs don't run ..

    12. Re:Oh really? by sydbarrett74 · · Score: 1

      So who exactly are they pleasing with this desire to copy all things Apple?

      Answer: content/media companies (DRM) and hardware manufacturers (more resources).

      --
      'He who has to break a thing to find out what it is, has left the path of wisdom.' -- Gandalf to Saruman
    13. Re:Oh really? by root_42 · · Score: 1

      Actually it is not completely true, that a desktop using only the traditional 2D accelerated drawing engines of the GPU is as snappy as the new compositing desktops used by Mac OS X, KDE 4 and Vista. Because there is one main difference: Backing Store (or whatever it is called outside of X11). The 2D accelerated variants rarely use it! With the 3D accelerated compositing desktops you basically get it for free, since every window is rendered into a texture. So whenever you move around a window, the underlying, exposed windows do not have to do complex redraw operations, just a simple texture fetch or blt is in order. This IS possible with 2D accelerated cards, but as I said, it is hardly ever done, for several reasons: video memory management probably being the biggest one, An expert on the implementation of this in X.org or similar could probably tell you more.

      --
      [--- PGP key and more on http://www.root42.de ---]
    14. Re:Oh really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Me thinks some are too blinded by hate and narrow imagination to appreciate cool things.

      Can you appreciate that some just simply find the colourful and cluttered Aero theme detrimental to their productivity? For me, the UI gets in the way of getting things done. (Not the looks so much, but the confused and unintuitive layout of various control elements. And the OS seems to give less detailed info than in XP about what it is actually doing with any non-trivial task of configuring hardware or manipulating data or troubleshooting .)

      Certainly it can be an inspiring interface for those who prefer eye candy over spartan looks, and more power to them. But kindly accept that it does not work for everybody -- I tried for a week until I concluded it's not just about the learning curve with a new thing but it's about logical flaws in the the design itself. From my private POV, Aero is a failure.

    15. Re:Oh really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just don't get who exactly they are trying to please. The home users HATE change, the gamers want an OS that sucks as little CPU and GPU as possible to give them better FPS and the business owners want low resource usage so they don't need expensive hardware along with backwards compatibility with all their old business apps. So who exactly are they pleasing with this desire to copy all things Apple?

      how about a thought that they try to keep the capitalism going? if they rewrite XP in assembler so that it runs blazingly fast on 80386, what will happen to intel, nvidia and co? who will by those quad-core cpus, those video cards, gigabyes of ram, terabytes of disks... come on! are you really in the business that long and still asking those questions?

    16. Re:Oh really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't believe I'm reading that. I was in the tech support industry when XP came out. It was a *NIGHTMARE*.

      Oh no doubt it sucked when released. That was a while ago however. It has, amazingly enough, improved!

    17. Re:Oh really? by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      IMHO, DOS 5.0 was the best OS Microsoft ever had.

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    18. Re:Oh really? by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      In fact with so many (poorly) written custom apps out there I'm not even sure if it is possible to do an OSX type 'rebirth'.

      Sure it's possible. MS just has to have the guts to do what Apple did: say that all the previous applications out there will not work - at all - in the new OS. Dual boot the last compatible version if you must (Apple had their machines dual boot OS X and Mac OS 9 for a while), but just dump all the old stuff. People who really need those old custom applications can keep running the old operating systems (as many are still - I've seen stuff purchased fairly recently that still needed to run on DOS!), or the lazy ass programmers who are still selling their same old crap from 15 years ago can finally rewrite the stuff.

      I've seen enough 15+ year old VB "applications" that people charge $100k+ for (that they haven't released an update for in years) that I just have no sympathy for them.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    19. Re:Oh really? by dzfoo · · Score: 1

      Exactly.

      *Whoosh!*

                -dZ.

      --
      Carol vs. Ghost
      ...Can you save Christmas?
    20. Re:Oh really? by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      But they are missing the point. We are talking about BUSINESS here, places with millions and when added together billions of dollars worth of software which they HAVE to have, or they might as well turn off the lights and call it a day. And you are telling me that they should be happy to throw away those millions and billions for the privilege of MSFT doing an OSX style reboot? Why? With OSX they were stuck in a dead end. System 9 had shitty program and memory management and frankly just couldn't be fixed. If MSFT had stuck with the Win9x arch I would agree with you wholeheartedly. But they didn't and frankly there isn't anything wrong with the WinNT arch, especially in Win2K/XP.

      Everyone seems to expect MSFT to do the impossible: To take the most clueless user that will click on anything and make an OS that they can't infect. Sorry, but it just can't be done because of dancing bunny problem. So no matter what MSFT does they are NEVER going to make these people safe. They just can't do it short of making a ROM image that they aren't allowed to save or install anything on, and folks won't stand for it.

      So here is my suggestion: Give the customer choice. Choice is good,right? We are all about free choice here, correct? Now you can't tell me that MSFT isn't making some serious money off of Win2K/WinXP. Sure they ain't making the insane profit margins that make the day traders rally to their stocks, but good money in a lousy economy none the less. What MSFT should do is to continue to sell Win2K/XP arch to those businesses that need it, as well as the home users that want it, and set up a group of programmers in Redmond. We'll call them the "WinNT arch old" division. And then say to these programmers "As long as we are making say, 15% above your salaries on this arch we need you to provide bugs fixes for it. if you come up with some new feature you want to add fine, we'll give you a website to offer them to the customers, but bug fixing is job #1 here".

      And that way those of us who don't want the "bling bling flipping 3d web search 3.0 live enabled" crap can still get what we need to WORK, and those of us that want the pretty and the home centric crap can have what they want. You can even spin it as "stepping forward by looking back" since it would be basically going back to the way it was when we had Win9x and WinNT. Those that wanted the home stuff had an OS just for them, and those that needed a machine for work had a rock solid stripped down OS that just booted and got out of the way, so we could run our apps, the things that PAY our salaries. Because as it is now they are trying to stuff us all in a giant multimedia mess of an OS that is so obviously coded by someone with Apple envy that it hurts. And if they actually go through with killing quicklaunch and the taskbar for Apple's dock I predict we will finally see MSFT drop like a rock, because frankly the users I have spoken to all same the same thing. They say "If I wanted an Apple, I would have bought one. If I am going to have to learn to do everything like an Apple, why shouldn't I just say screw MSFT and buy an Apple which seems to last longer anyway?" And I have to agree. Bring back Allchin, FIRE Ballmer, and make business job #1 again, or in 5 years I predict that MSFT will be where Yahoo is now. Just another used to be trying to recapture past glory.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    21. Re:Oh really? by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      You seem to be assuming though that the instant Microsoft comes out with a new version of Windows that the old ones quit working. There is still software out there, working, and being used, that HAS to run on Windows 3.1. For those programs, or the users that use them, you simply don't upgrade. A decent amount of the software is used in such limited fahsions that it won't really be an issue (and the worst offenders already are so poorly coded that even Microsoft's existing efforts to maintain compatibility haven't been sufficent to keep them working on a newer platform).

      The businesses that use them can either a:

      a) Keep using them on their existing OS.
      b) If the company that made it still exists, wait on them to rewrite the software to work on the newer platform.
      c) If the company that made it doesn't still exist (or exists but doesn't support that product at all any more), then look at replacing it either with a COTS program, or custom written (either in house or contracted out). Indeed if this is the case a company should be looking at moving anyways. Staying with a program that no longer has any vendor support whatsoever is a recipe for disaster, and should be viewed as a temporarily solution at all times.

      It's just a simple fact of life that the whole world can't pause and wait because a few obscure programs won't run on a new platform.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    22. Re:Oh really? by Allador · · Score: 1

      EXACTLY! I tried Server 2K8 and I was like "Why? Why in the hell can't you just add a basic GUI on top of this and sell it to business users for the desktop? Why?" It is low resource,doesn't have tons of bloated multimedia junk that has NO business being in a business OS, and runs solid as a rock. So why can't those of use who just want to get our work done buy this on a machine without shelling out insane money for a server license? Why?

      You realize that Vista SP1 and Server 2008 are the same OS, right? The packaging is a little different, the default installed apps and services are different, etc.

      But its no trouble to make Vista act just like 2008.

      Once you have configurations the same, the only difference is drivers. I think this is where most folks see the difference. Drivers for server equipment tend to be much better, and the drivers for Vista for consumer level equipment are still not where they should be.

      Compound this by the fact that people are buying these garbage second-rate consumer class sytems from BestBuy and such, and they're surprised why their pretty $400 laptop from Toshiba doesnt work half the time? It's because its a terribly designed piece of hardware, with terribly written drivers, and shipped in a configuration that has tons of adware and unnecessary garbage turned on.

      The fact that people like yourself say how great 2k8 is but then complain about Vista is speaking to the resellers (Dell, HP, etc) and the packaging from the resellers, not the underlying OS.

      And in fact, business users of Vista machines DO set it up like you describe. They make custom builds of the OS that include only what their business needs, and they run it locked down with UAC configured exactly the way they like it, etc.

    23. Re:Oh really? by amabbi · · Score: 1

      And if any of the guys from MSFT are reading this: STOP trying to be Apple! If I would have wanted a freaking Apple I would have bought one,okay? You are a business company, NOT a home entertainment company. Make a decent low resource using business OS and stop trying to be "Steve Jobs Jr" because frankly it is embarrassing.

      If MSFT tried to be more like Apple, it would be a good thing. Remember the OS X development cycle? They made the core of the OS stable first before they worked on the GUI. The first release was OS X used the old Platinum UI. Instead, it seems like for Windows development, the flashiness of Aero or whatever they're going to call the Win7 theme appears to take precedent. Look at all the screen shots proliferating of Win7; it's all about the "new" interface, same as the old interface.

      If MSFT wanted to be more like Apple, they would make sure that the core of their OS is rock stable before working on flashy gimmicks. That's the lesson than MSFT hasn't learned yet.

  61. Features New to Windows 7 by tshak · · Score: 4, Informative

    Over 100 comments and we still don't have a concise list of substantial features Windows 7 offers over Vista?

    Features New to Windows 7.

    Enjoy!

    --

    There is no longer anything that can be done with computers that is nontrivial and clearly legal. -- Paul Phillips
    1. Re:Features New to Windows 7 by IceDiver · · Score: 1

      Fine, I looked at the new features list. One or two interesting items, but nothing that makes me sit up and go "Gotta have it!"

    2. Re:Features New to Windows 7 by gparent · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There's nothing that makes me excited every Ubuntu release either. You're just hating it because you can.

    3. Re:Features New to Windows 7 by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      I think he's pointing out that there is a lot of fandom for nothing.

      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
    4. Re:Features New to Windows 7 by gparent · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sure, but there's the same post on Slashdot every new Ubuntu release too. But somehow, since it's for Windows, it's BAD! Just pointing out the irony.

    5. Re:Features New to Windows 7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      None of them makes me really excited enough to pay money and spend time to upgrade.

    6. Re:Features New to Windows 7 by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      Sure, but there's the same post on Slashdot every new Ubuntu release too. But somehow, since it's for Windows, it's BAD! Just pointing out the irony.

      No, usually on Ubuntu stories it's some random rubbish about, "I tried Ubuntu and I couldn't get it to work, Ubuntu sucks".

      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
    7. Re:Features New to Windows 7 by Valen0 · · Score: 2, Informative

      The only "features" that I see of interest are:

      * Solid state disk handling improvements.
      * Multi-touch support.
      * "Library" (AKA virtual folder) support.
      * A redesigned task bar that looks like a carbon copy of the Mac OS X Dock.
      * A "redesigned" start menu with more visual effects and no classic (i.e. Windows 2000) mode.
      * More DRM.

      Other than the above mentioned features, Windows 7 looks like Windows Vista/Mojave with a new UI theme.

      DirectX 11 was left off the list because it will most likely be available for Windows Vista as well.

      --
      -Valen
    8. Re:Features New to Windows 7 by maxume · · Score: 1

      Ubuntu ate my cat.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    9. Re:Features New to Windows 7 by gbarules2999 · · Score: 1

      Ubuntu doesn't cost money. The next Ubuntu release doesn't put Canonical's future at stake. There's a difference.

    10. Re:Features New to Windows 7 by gparent · · Score: 1

      The cost of Ubuntu doesn't have anything to do with what I'm talking about.

  62. I hate it already by mustafap · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Besides the fact the Vista looking menu bar gave me the shudders, I had a sudden image of my computer being this dumb screen with a goldfish on it, nothing else, everything else being a click away on the Internet, paid for by the minute.

    Thank God there are alternatives, even if I don't particularly like them.

    --
    Open Source Drum Kit, LPLC deve board - mjhdesigns.com
    1. Re:I hate it already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kill yourself!

  63. Re:It isn't "eye candy" by Orbijx · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    To answer your questions:

    Yes, I feel that the iPod is just eye candy. The UI is abysmal, that damn wheel is annoying, and whatever happened to something as logical as what my Sansa c240 with Rockbox uses?
    The iPhone is useless glitter. Sorry, but I don't want a phone that isn't a clamshell. I also want a phone that can take a beating like my Samsung A640 and A900 did. The 900's been kicked across a four lane road, thrown down a stairwell during an argument, dropped, juggled, and all around beaten. Thing lasted nearly two years before I finally managed to crack the bottom of the chassis and decide, "Yeah, time to use the replacement plan anyway."
    The Wii would be interesting, since it's different, but I'll leave the WiiFit to the others.
    And finally, yes, I would rather drive a Geo Metro instead of a Honda Civic.

    As for things like semitransparent windows... I'll let someone else use those. I'm not a fan.

    --
    One of these days, I am going to flip out. When I flip out, I'll be back in five minutes.
  64. Re:Linux has UAC too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It is called "sudo" and if your theoretical linux games would need root access to install mods as well. Or do you run your linux box as root all the time?

    Heya, Obvious Troll! How's the obvious work these days? Economy treating you well?

    Your first spraying of words-before-a-period, while it contains quantity, amazingly lacks what would be needed to form an actual coherent sentence. But from what I can salvage from it, I'll answer that almost all Linux games I've seen have two sets of data, one stored in the global settings (where you need root to do stuff) that applies to everyone and one in your home directory (where you DON'T need root to do stuff) that just applies to you as a user. Stepmania can read songs, characters, movies, and all other mods from ~/.stepmania. Any Q3A-engine game (Q3A itself, OpenArena, World of Padman, etc) can read its mods from its respective home directory entry without being root. Any Unreal-engine game can read its mods from its respective home directory entry without being root. Freeciv, BZFlag, Frozen Bubble, Puzzle Pirates, anything. Any decently-written Linux game (so, not cheap ports of crappy Windows games) will understand this and won't write to the root-owned stuff unless you very specifically tell it to. Why on earth Windows has to do this is beyond me.

    I'll admit, I run as root most of the time in Linux too, at least when I'm in a GUI. Know why? For most of Linux's history, it was a pain in the ass to not run as root. Only until recently have they had a good way to elevate privileges in the GUI.

    Linux: Ur doin it wrong. Exactly what is it you needed to do that required non-stop elevated privs in a GUI environment? No, "constantly reconfigure my hardware" doesn't count.

  65. You know what I just noticed by coryking · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Sansa c240
    Samsung A640
    Samsung A900

    vs

    iPhone
    iPod

    "I own an iPhone" vs "I own a RAZR v3". "The new iPhone is sweet" vs "The new Samsung A610 is sweet".

    Anybody else notice the difference?

    1. Re:You know what I just noticed by Reziac · · Score: 1

      One was named by a poet. The other was named by an engineer.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    2. Re:You know what I just noticed by pdusen · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Not really, although I'm betting that's your whole point.

    3. Re:You know what I just noticed by Draek · · Score: 1

      The fact that nobody mentions Apple in conjunction with the iPod and iPhone and, as such, means that Apple is stuck using the iThingie naming scheme if they wish to take advantage of their products' brand loyalty, unlike Samsung or Motorola?

      Or the fact that Apple's marketing department seems to despise version numbers and are happy with people reffering to an ancient music player and a modern video player with the same name?

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
  66. Re:I think modern window systems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dude, 10 year old video cards could *not* handle what Vista needs.

    I think his argument is just that what vista adds isn't worth it compared to the hardware acceleration we used prior to it.

    Personally I prefer compiz to anything microsoft has to offer, but I can appreciate people that feel otherwise. Even I have to wonder if its worth the resource hit sometimes.

  67. Re:I think modern window systems by John+Betonschaar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Let's just stop here because you obviously don't know much about how video cards work. You can 'cache' anything you like in video RAM without using the 3D capabilities at all, just like you can DMA stuff around without taxing the CPU, and draw stuff to the screen with just a few FIFO commands, it is not, (I repeat: it is NOT) what makes your system 'slow' unless you want to blur title bars, wiggle windows when you move them or add all kinds of other visual effects just because you can.

    The only valid point you make is that with a full-blown GPU-accelerated desktop you can throw in much more eye candy without slowing down the system. My point is, that if you don't need/want/care about this eye-candy, about everything essentially already _is_ GPU-accelerated, even without Aero. Windows Vista doesn't NEED anything besides age-old window drawing, it just offers you the option to throw (in my opinion) useless eye at you that only distracts from the actual GUI.

    Also I doubt your claim that Aero actually does TTF rendering on the GPU, do you have any references to back that up?

  68. Re:I think modern window systems by John+Betonschaar · · Score: 1

    And let me add just for clarity that I'm only respondng to your own comment that said you will slow down your computer when you turn off Aero, because the desktop is not GPU accelerated anymore (note again: these are your own words). I'm not passing judgement on the 'coolness' or necessity of such features, because of course it is pretty obvious that you can use the GPU for cool stuff, it's what Linux and OS X do as well (albeit better/more functional, especially OS X), and that's what I use on a daily basis. So please keep your comments about 'narrow minded techies' on '80 character displays' out of this.

  69. Re:I think modern window systems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You don't seem to be comprehending well.

    When Aero Glass is turned off, the Vista GUI falls back to 2D mode. Every graphics card made in the last decade hardware accelerates 2D.

    So from a performance standpoint it doesn't matter whether your graphics can handle the 3D Aero or not, either way it gets done in hardware.

  70. Re:Linux has UAC too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You need to learn more about GNU/Linux Sr.

  71. Re:I think modern window systems by coryking · · Score: 2, Informative

    Also I doubt your claim that Aero actually does TTF rendering on the GPU, do you have any references to back that up?

    Ask and ye shall receive:

    One of the most important factors in determining WPF performance is that it is render boundâ"the more pixels you have to render, the greater the performance cost. However, the more rendering that can be offloaded to the graphics processing unit (GPU), the more performance benefits you can gain. The WPF application hardware rendering pipeline takes full advantage of Microsoft DirectX features on hardware that supports a minimum of Microsoft DirectX version 7.0. Further optimizations can be gained by hardware that supports Microsoft DirectX version 7.0 and PixelShader 2.0+ features.

    Source: Optimizing Performance: Taking Advantage of Hardware

    Tier 2: Text rendering--Sub-pixel font rendering uses available pixel shaders on the graphics hardware.

    Source: Graphics Rendering Tiers.

    ClearType in Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) can take advantage of hardware acceleration for better performance and to reduce CPU load and system memory requirements. By using the pixel shaders and video memory of a graphics card, ClearType provides faster rendering of text, particularly when animation is used.

    Source: ClearType Overview
    See also: Typography in Windows Presentation Foundation

  72. Re:Linux has UAC too by bignetbuy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How the hell did you get a +3 Insightful after spewing such nonsense?

    Run as root most of the time? On most Linux distros you have to ignore warnings, some repeated multiple times, about using the root account. Sudo is installed by default for a reason...because running as root on a desktop is just plain absurd. Making excuses to cover your own incompetence at sudo only highlights your utter lack of security focus. How hard is it to open a terminal window (or use a Gnome applet which puts a terminal line on your taskbar) and type "sudo system-config-display" or whatever you need to run as root?

    Sudo cannot be like UAC since sudo came first.

    Sudo also offers about a bunch of additional features and controls that UAC can't even comprehend. Restricting commands that users can run as root? Check. Grouping commands? Check. Enforcing environment restrictions like requiring a valid tty and dropping non-standard environment variables? Check? Granting commands to groups of users with a single line? Check. Allowing users to edit specific files with sudoedit? Check.

    Have you even used sudo?

  73. Re:Bye bye Linux by poetmatt · · Score: 1

    who could have seen that coming? :D

  74. Re:Links to the torrent (for Google impaired folks by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

    Actually if you wanted a real replacement to previous versions of Windows wouldn't you suggest ReactOS?

    --
    You just got troll'd!
  75. What you are "aware" of is a lie. by bhpaddock · · Score: 5, Informative

    Windows Vista's performance "problems" have nothing to do with DRM. If you aren't playing back a DRM'd file, then there is no DRM-specific code running, and no penalty of any kind. The idea that Vista had any more DRM code running than Windows XP was a myth propogated mostly buy people who knew it wasn't true, and others who were gullible and believed anything that sounded bad about Vista.

    If you don't want DRM, don't buy any DRM'd media. Having support for DRM'd media in the OS (like BluRay / HDCP / etc) has absolutely ZERO impact on people who don't use DRM'd media.

    Vista had its issues and they are well understood, there is no reason to make up myths to blame them on.

    1. Re:What you are "aware" of is a lie. by Sinbios · · Score: 1

      ...Why is this modded troll?

      --
      Anyone can "stand up for what they believe", but it takes a very brave individual to change what they believe. - Loundry
    2. Re:What you are "aware" of is a lie. by ushimitsudoki · · Score: 1

      This doesn't make sense. If Vista isn't at least checking a file for the presence of DRM, then it can't possibly be doing anything DRM-related at all.

      So, it seems obvious that Vista must have some DRM-specific code running for non-DRM files, even if it is only as quick as "check and exit"

      --
      Me and U(buntu) - my blog about Ubun
    3. Re:What you are "aware" of is a lie. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If you don't want DRM, don't buy any DRM'd media. Having support for DRM'd media in the OS (like BluRay / HDCP / etc) has absolutely ZERO impact on people who don't use DRM'd media."

      Unless you ignore the convoluted driver models needed to support DRM which impacts you whether you're running DRMed media or not.

    4. Re:What you are "aware" of is a lie. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vista doesn't need to check a file for DRM-specific code because the media file itself invokes the DRM. If you attempt to play a file that has DRM that file starts the ball rolling, Vista has no business checking every file you open in a "check and exit" fashion because that's completely and totally the wrong way to go about things, and it doesn't go that way. Have you ever tried to play a video or some audio that requires a license to be present for playback? The file itself is what instructs the system to enable various DRM schemes for the playback of that specific file.

      Simply put, if you never try to play anything that is encumbered by DRM, you never run into DRM and it has absolutely zero impact on your performance. There is no overhead associated because there is no checking done, when a file is opened by an application that supports it that application will take the proper measures to utilize the protected media path.

    5. Re:What you are "aware" of is a lie. by Daengbo · · Score: 1

      What about the network transfer problems while Media Player was trying to deal with DRM issues?

      http://it.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/08/26/1628200

      Ok, so it's not actually a DRM issue.

      My two cents? Vista SP1 is on par with XP SP3 in almost every benchmark. Win7 runs fine in 512MB RAM and outperforms Vista in almost every benchmark.

      I still prefer Debian.

    6. Re:What you are "aware" of is a lie. by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      Having support for DRM'd media in the OS (like BluRay / HDCP / etc) has absolutely ZERO impact on people who don't use DRM'd media.

      That is simply not possible, if you define "support for DRM'd media" as "support for the restrictions of DRM'd media" as Microsoft has. They've jumped through great hoops to make sure you can't copy restricted content. Do you truly and sincerely believe that all of the extra defensive code has no effect on the system's performance and stability?

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  76. Re:Yes, because 2009 IS the year of the Linux desk by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

    Heresy! 2009 is the year of the Windows 7 desktop!

    Considered how this type of prediction has proven to be self-defeating (kidding kidding, please don't hit me with the correlation!=causation stick), it's the only way to ensure the true coming of the year of the Linux desktop! Muahahaha!

    --
    You just got troll'd!
  77. Re:Linux has UAC too by jonadab · · Score: 1

    > It is called "sudo" and if your theoretical linux games would need root access
    > to install mods as well. Or do you run your linux box as root all the time?

    Firefox on Linux doesn't need root access to install add-ons. Neither does Battle for Wesnoth. If the software is designed correctly, add-on content can be installed on a per-user basis, and you only need admin privs to install it system-wide. This should be true on Windows as well as on Unix systems.

    But the big difference between UAC and sudo is that Unix systems have had privileges and security from day one, and it has been the normal expected thing that the user does not log in with administrative privileges for normal day-to-day activities, since the seventies. So most software is designed so that it doesn't *need* root privs. So you only get gksudo prompts when you try to do actual system administration stuff; the rest of the time it leaves you alone. Stuff that needs to happen in the background with root privileges is run via a mechanism that can provide that (e.g., cron), *not* out of the logged-in user's desktop session.

    With Vista the notion that the user is normally unprivileged is a totally new way of thinking for many software developers. They were *supposed* to build software for Windows 2000 and for Windows XP under the assumption that the logged-in user might not be an administrator, but even quite major developers like Symantec (and, indeed, even Microsoft) never really got this completely right, and there's a lot of software out there that gets it very BADLY wrong, to the extent that some software simply CANNOT be run from a limited account at all. (Ostensibly educational games are particularly bad for this.)

    This was a problem before, including under XP, but Vista forces the issue because the user *can't* work around it by just logging in as Administrator all the time (which they *shouldn't* have been doing all along, but people were). This is what needed to be done, but it'll take a while for all the third-party Windows-based software developers to update their whole way of thinking and finally get this right.

    UAC, in the long term, is good. It's necessary, and it's the way Windows *desperately* needed to go. But yes, it's going to cause some pain for a few years until all the third-party software gets redesigned under the new way of thinking. Seven isn't really going to change this one way or another, because it's the application software that needs to be updated to fix the too-many-UAC-prompts problem.

    --
    Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
  78. Re:I think modern window systems by LSD-OBS · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think you need to read those links again.

    Read the description of Redering Tier 2, the highest level of acceleration. The TTF fonts are NOT rendered on the card. Instead, in ClearType mode, the raw pixels are sent to the graphics card in a format representing 3x normal horizontal resolution, and are then edge blended with the existing pixels for a convincing anti-aliased look on LCD displays.

    Also note, they're talking only about DX9 there with no mention of DX10, and note the restrictions about what *isn't* accelerated.

    Did you perhaps mean to give us a different link with relevant information?

    --
    Today's weirdness is tomorrow's reason why. -- Hunter S. Thompson
  79. replying to cancel accidental mod by rockypg · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    replying to cancel accidental mod

  80. Re:Bye bye Linux by NeuroManson · · Score: 1

    Sure, all they need to do is show a slot machine, showing that if you use 3 7s, you win, if not, you're screwed and lose all your money. Apple would LOVE that "Windows is a Gamble" opening.

    BTW Steve Jobs, you now owe me $5,000 for that idea, large bills please.

    --
    Just because you can mod me down, doesn't mean you're right. Shoes for industry!
  81. Re:Same Desktop UI model we've had for the last 15 by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

    Providing skinning abilities, or UI modularity (ala Glade for GTK and NIBs for OSX), such that you could eliminate or add elements to your UI -- the buttons and widgets simply pair up with under the hood events that get fired off based on events.

    That way you could ship the 'same old' for the people who like it, and individuals could experiment with what they like 'more'.

    Office 2007 probably isn't the best example of 'new design' in terms of success or failure -- Office long ago stopped being anything more than a dumping ground for committee sourced features that have nothing to do with providing a functional word processing environment -- rather catering/pandering to the perceived marketing requirements of the entire spectrum of users from amateur to pro. (Although for your post it's a good example of 'Hey you guys changed my thing!')

    I'm confused. Isn't glade somewhat like the old VB or MFC? You could skin your application in Windows from a long time ago. Remember Winamp 1.0? Are you talking about OS UI or program UI?

    And I wasn't talking about the features in Office 2007 like you are. I am just talking about the user interface which I think was the most major rehaul ever since the first version. And for that, MS got some major bitching around the place from previous Office users. Never mind that almost every new and casual user simply loves the new interface. And we had people on here saying that OO.o was much better for the Office 2003 folks to transition to, because it was more familiar.

    --
    This space for rent.
  82. Re:Linux has UAC too by AlexMax2742 · · Score: 1

    Why on earth Windows has to do this is beyond me.

    Once again, it's not Windows' fault, it's the software makers fault. Windows NT has had limited-access accounts since forever, it's just that old habits (Writing games for single-user Windows 9x environments) die hard unless you go out of your way to enforce limited user accounts like Vista did.

    --
    I'm the guy with the unpopular opinion
  83. Re:Links to the torrent (for Google impaired folks by PenGun · · Score: 1

    Just one of 97 windose 7 torrents right now at that site.

  84. Re:Linux has UAC too by recoiledsnake · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How hard is it to open a terminal window (or use a Gnome applet which puts a terminal line on your taskbar) and type "sudo system-config-display" or whatever you need to run as root?

    How hard is it to click a button when the UAC UI pops up? Still we have a lot of bitching about it going on. Users, especially non-power users, don't like anything that gets in their way of installing smileys.exe

    --
    This space for rent.
  85. A better microsoft product?? LMAO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They keep claiming, I have yet to see it happen. I've been more satisfied with my commodore 64 than with any Microsoft product.

  86. Re:It isn't "eye candy" by D+Ninja · · Score: 1

    Yes, I feel that the iPod is just eye candy. The UI is abysmal, that damn wheel is annoying, and whatever happened to something as logical as what my Sansa c240 with Rockbox uses?

    Well, I must first admit that I have not used a Sansa c240 or Rockbox, so I cannot speak to their interfaces. However (and yes, I do a lot of work with user interfaces), the interface of the iPod is sheer genius. Every person I know who owns the iPod picked it up quickly and naturally without having to read the instructions (and these are non-tech people I'm talking about). That, right there, defines an excellent interface.

    As for driving a Geo Metro over a Honda Civic...well...I have to wonder if you have actually tried to drive both cars and compare them, or if you're just arguing for arguing sake.

  87. Re:Linux has UAC too by SavvyPlayer · · Score: 1

    Even without "UAC" (gui-integrated sudo) temporarily gaining root access via a GNU/*nix gui is simply a matter of running the executable in question via sudo from the command line (i.e., sudo nautilus, sudo thunar, sudo systemsettings, etc.). That's been the case for the past decade or so anyway.

  88. God Damn! It's Good to be KING !! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Windows is all the rage. Was then, is now, will be then. God Damn! It's Good to be KING !!

    1. Re:God Damn! It's Good to be KING !! by NeverVotedBush · · Score: 4, Funny

      Settle down, man. This is just another "Mojave" commercial.

  89. Server 2008? by Xaemyl · · Score: 1

    Anyone know how the new beta compares (in terms of speed, etc.) to Server 2008? I ask, because some people used Server 2008's "Desktop Experience" thing as a replacement for Vista, and says it runs a lot better.

    Was just wondering ...

  90. Much ado about nothing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    IMHO MS just "doesn't get it" and is doing stupid things by design, maybe the problem is too much "design by committee" or something.

    The problem with Vista / Win7 / etc. wasn't that they tried to do TOO MUCH, it's that they tried to to TOO LITTLE. They're about 10 years BEHIND the current hardware (the mainstream CPU has been '64 bit' for YEARS even on low end parts). Given Moore's law it'll be even more pathetically inadequate in 2009/2010 when we're supposedly to be using Win7. By then we'll have at least cheap 16GB RAM, 64GB SSDs, 2TB HDDs for a song, 8 core 64 GFLOP CPUs, 2 TFLOP GPUs, better HD screens, 4Mbit/s+ broadband into more and more houses, and still we'll be stuck with .... notepad .... and corrupted registries and driver cleaner / crap cleaner / applications that won't install / uninstall / backup / transfer properly most of which being 32 bit.

    Now for netbooks / mobile internet devices, OK, yes, for those, design a lean efficient low bloat OS. That is not the same product as your desktop / laptop offering.

    I have relatively little problem with 'bloat' if it gets me major new generations of CAPABILITIES. Wake up, the HARDWARE we use today is LIGHT YEARS ahead of the SOFTWARE's capabilities to even USE it in 99% of the cases. Lack of 64 bit applications and applications that intelligently use RAM is one example -- 8GB of RAM costs as little as $40 today. Every one of my family's desktops has 8GB installed now, and if it wasn't for the stupid limitations of the motherboard / chipset, I'd have put 16GB or 32GB into the heavily used machines for these kinds of (commodity) RAM prices.

    My quad core CPU is still something like 90% idle doing most OS / web / desktop stuff even under Vista with all the eye candy on. If I complain about it being *slow* it is probably because it is ALGORITHMICALLY broken in some buggy brain damaged way (like the horrible network throughput when you're playing audio or something) not because it is inherently trying to do something that exceeds the capabilities of my actual hardware given well designed software.

    The main problem is that we can't even take good advantage of the multi-gigabytes of RAM, multi-terabytes of disc, multi-cores of CPUs, multi-teraflops of GPUs we have. A typical 'power user' desktop today exceeds the compute / RAM / storage capabilities of a 'supercomputer' in the 1990s, yet we're using a OS design / implementation that is BARELY any better than what we had then -- e.g. NTFS, FAT32, 32 bit OS being the most common, et. al.

    I wouldn't care too much if they wrote vast portions of the whole OS in something uber bloated / slow like VB or JAVA as long as the performance critical bits were fast and the overall thing was well designed for reliability, stability, and easy extensibility to take full advantage of the system.

    There needs to be a REVOLUTIONARY improvement in things like filesystems (say start with ZFS then migrate MOST EVERYTHING to use a full featured relational database model on top of that with MAJOR emphasis on metadata, schema use, RDF, et. al.). There needs to be a REVOLUTIONARY improvement in things like BACKUP. Ever had a 1.44 MB floppy or CD go bad on you and lose valuable data? Didn't that suck? The average joe in 2009 will be having 1TB drives! Can you imagine losing a LIFETIME of data in one catastrophic event -- ALL your family pictures / movies from maybe 3 generations of family, ALL your documents, ALL your personal files, et. al.? That's going to be a common occurrence due to viruses, hardware failure, or whatever, and the OSs like VISTA are just PATHETICALLY mis-designed to help people manage their storage / data / metadata, do backups, do searches, synchronize, transfer, etc. -- basically they're beyond uselessly bad at giving storage management resources. Heck not a day goes by that I am not even limited by the silly 128 character 'path length' 'limits' even in the latest VISTA 64.
    No, Windows Home Server is not a solution. Forget backwa

    1. Re:Much ado about nothing... by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      First off. Microsoft lost a major court case and as a result no MS Office or any other additional functionality will ever have a chance at becoming a standard component within the OS.

      It also sounds like you want your PC to be running at 100% utilization at all times. I do 3d modelling and animation for a living. I use a lot of ram and a lot of cpu and gpu power. I'd rather have it available, than having it processing mysql crap in the background.

      However I do agree with you, especially your statement about vista not being able to print or view most of MS's doc formats out of the box, notepad, ms paint, etc. It is rather ridiculous. Especially when you try a mac, and out of the box they read pdf, preview all kinds of graphic formats etc.

      MS media player is still pathetic. Its amazing that they still cant get it right. Vista has a graphics viewer that cant view many graphic formats at all. Why do they bother?

      Thumbnail previews are great, but theres no thumbnail previews for quicktime, 32bit tiffs, tga, pic, etc.

      The zip functionality in Vista is just dumb.

      Its just garbage that is all worthless and needs to be replaced by buying third party applications.

      But again it does come back to the whole United States vs Microsoft trial, where MS was found guilty of bundling software, and using their monopoly muscle to put the little guy out of business.

      Apple does all of the crap MS was guilty of and to this day, Apple is not subject to the same nonsense.

      So we see a more complete experience in Mac OS.

      Linux is a totally different beast. They're the old PC users... the guys that see computers as progressive instruments that have untapped potential and it is best to invent, create and provide the technology, for the sake of the progress of computers. A linux user is the kind of person that sees their PC as a tool they can use as is, or as how they see it because they understand that a PC should not be limited by some corporate mickey mouse dictatorship out to tell you what you can and cant do with your computer.

      Thats not a shot at microsoft, because microsoft used to be of that mindset. Hell their entire company was founded on that idea.

      I think its unfair to assume that MS hasnt had this kind of internal debate for sometime. They know deep down that if they cant provide a better, more well rounded experience than linux or apple, that they in time will run the risk of being irrelevant. Its not too far fetched. People are more dissatisfied with MS than ever. That does not mean MS cant pull a great OS out of their ass.

      We shall see.

    2. Re:Much ado about nothing... by careysub · · Score: 1

      Let me just say this about Anonymous Coward's post: "Hallelujah brother!"

      This comment is absolutely dead on!

      --
      Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
  91. Vista's failure tied to grassroots. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    How many of you have friends and family that call you before ordering a computer? Personally, I make 50 to 60 recommendations a year. Always the same--order from the web, order from the small business section, and pay extra, if you have to, to not get Vista.

    I build my own machines. Dealing with the Vista WGA was too much of a pain in the ass for me to ever want to switch to XP. For this reason, I tell people if they do get a machine with Vista, not to call me with their problems.

    Of the 50 to 60 people to whom I make recommendations, with how many do those share the advice to steer away from Vista? How many other resident PC guru's are making the same recommendations to their circle of friends?

    Forget about in the office. Recommending a switch to Vista tends to be a career killer... There is a reason MS hasn't been too forceful in stuffing Vista down the throat of businesses.

  92. Re:Linux has UAC too by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

    UAC pops up asking you to elevate to delete a shortcut on the desktop, and then annoys you a SECOND time, asking if you're really sure you want to delete it. In Linux, you don't need root to delete a shortcut from your desktop.

    In Linux I get prompted for a password to change system settings or install software. That is basically it.

    Also, the parent above was saying Linux didn't have an easy way to elevate privileges in the GUI. KDE has had kdesu for ages. You also don't need a terminal. You can just run command "kdesu kcontrol". It has worked great for years.

    Or you just install a service menu that allows you to elevate to root with a right-click.

    --
    http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
  93. Re:I think modern window systems by Ash+Vince · · Score: 1

    The only problem with your logic is that you assume that modern 3D graphics cards are just as good at 2d rendering as they are at 3D. Unfortunately this is not the case. Both ATI and NVidia concentrate on what gets them good reviews, and that is good 3d rendering for games. Quite frequently this is at the expense of 2D performance.

    A modern high-end graphics card is optimised for its 3D pipelines, so I personally would try and use them whenever possible. Hopefully the driver does that all automatically but if it is true that you change the way windows renders stuff by disabling aero then you are probably not using your PC to its fullest. A better idea might be to keep Aero enabled but turn off the eye candy you don't like on a feature by feature basis.

    Of course I still don't use vista and I dont have to support it at work so I have no idea how it works in the least.

    --
    I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
  94. PLEASE MOD PARENT UP by earlymon · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    As I write this, the parent is modded Off-Topic for responding:

    They never left. I use Vista, and it's as snappy as XP ever was.

    To a DIRECT QUOTE from http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1074689&cid=26250025 that was at 5 as I write this.

    That seems patently impossible.

    --
    Pathological kinda promises Path + Logical - but instead, you get stuck with pathetic.
    1. Re:PLEASE MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As if he would get modded up. The linux loving assholes on this website would never allow such a comment. They are kinda like religious extremists.

  95. help! by ascari · · Score: 1

    How do I get past the blue screen at startup?

  96. Re:I think modern window systems by slimjim8094 · · Score: 1

    Aside from being a tool, what you're talking about is called DirectDraw and it was part of DirectX from just about the beginning.

    It's the 2D equivalent of Direct3D. And yes it does all that.

    --
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  97. Re:Linux has UAC too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    in linux i'm pretty sure you can install your own programs to /home/you/bin if you want, thereby avoiding the need for root access to do so.

    as for running as root most of the time in GNU/linux, well there is something fundamental about about the linux way that you're not quite grasping. what it is i'm not sure.

    but if you're upset about having to type in a password to install new software (which can be avoided with the right setup), or maybe to compile a program (which isn't true, the password is only needed at the 'make install' stage, after compilation) then you need to understand it is important.

    just clicking 'allow' in vista is useless. it doesn't tell you that a program wants root level access, it just lets you know that maybe it might want it when it runs, were not really sure, but we thought we'd let you know anyways.

    when i enter my root password in GNU/linux i know for a fact that what i'm doing needs access to non-userspace in my operating system, and it also lets me know that i'll be asked for that password before any other software can have that access as well.

    the linux/unix way is a bit more annoying when i'm installing lots and lots of new software after a new install, but once the box is set up right it's invaluable and far more usefull than vista's UAC which is like bad, off-broadway security theater.

    lastly the ability to assign partitions to be a directory is a godsend. i haven't had to back up my personal files in years because i keep /home/ set to a whole different partition that never gets reformatted and the distos i like will assimilate a /home/ directory with the same username as the user you created on install.

    there is fundamental behaviour in windows that simply seems inferior to the behaviour in linux. that's the stuff that us 'linux fanbois' like and they are the same reasons we don't like windows.

  98. Re:Linux has UAC too by azenpunk · · Score: 1

    damn, why did i post that anonymously?

  99. Re:I think modern window systems by EnglishTim · · Score: 1

    There's a bit more to it than that though. I'm not sure how it works in non-Aero Vista, but Windows XP only draws the sections of a window that are not covered by another window, meaning that only visible window portions are drawn.

    More modern window managers (Apple's Quartz, Vista, Compviz on Linux) render the entire window to a texture and then use the GPU hardware to render them to the screen. The advantage of this is that you can move the windows around without having to repaint them. When you draw a menu over the top of a window, you don't have to repaint the window below when remove it. Also, it makes the rendering more simple. You don't have to paint the window in lots of rectangular sections, you just paint the whole thing.

    Having said all that, modern processors are sufficiently speedy that it probably doesn't make that much difference any more. If I drag a window around on my little XP netbook I can just about see the window underneath having to redraw but it's so quick that it doesn't really bother me.

  100. All I want to know is .... by Simulant · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Can it copy files from one place to another in a reasonable amount of time now? Without tweaking?

    Does the interface still hang for no apparent reason when browsing for files?

    Are they still using hard links for the user profile directories?

    I've tried Vista several times and as of a few weeks ago, with the latest beta SP, it's still crap at some of most basic things an operating should be good at.... navigation and pushing data around.

    1. Re:All I want to know is .... by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Wow. Right on!

      This is exactly my experience with Vista 64bit. I like Vista, there is a lot going for it, its very stable and the new ui workflow, search, and little things here and there make it worth running.

      However you nailed my experience perfectly. These are the exact issues i have with Vista.

    2. Re:All I want to know is .... by Shados · · Score: 1

      the file copy and browsing issues were fixed in SP1. The hard links are mostly for backward compatibility (so stupid apps that hardcoded it don't break). If you had these issues with the latest patches as you mention, something's really really wrong with your setup.

    3. Re:All I want to know is .... by Simulant · · Score: 1

      "the file copy and browsing issues were fixed in SP1" So I've been told, and indeed, raw copy speed seems ok now. The GUI, however still hangs too frequently, for no apparent reason. There could very well be something wrong with my setup but XP on the same hardware, in the same environment, doesn't have this problem.

  101. Insightful? It's ignorant and dishonest. by Nursie · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "It is called "sudo" and if your theoretical linux games would need root access to install mods as well. Or do you run your linux box as root all the time?"

    No, no it's not. It's nothing at all like sudo.

    Sure, it pops up a box once in a while asking for extra permissions. That bit is like sudo, or graphical sudo, but that's not all that UAC does, nor is it the annoying bit.

    UAC blocks you from running programs at system startup on your own computer. It helpfully says that your administrator has set up a system policy to disallow it (lies). And I'm buggered if I can find a way to allow things to run that windows hasn't decided *on its own* that I'm not supposed to.

    Add to that the pissing annoying virtual store technology that silently redirects activity aimed at files under Program Files to a directory under the user's private data area, without telling/warning/stopping anyone and screwing up multi-user uses of the machine (other users see a different version of the file). It doesn't ask for root, it just makes a total fucking mess. If they wanted to have restricted areas maybe they should investigate some goddamn file permissions. There is no dialog. It's a SILENT process that screws a lot of stuff up.

    UAC sucks balls and is NOT like sudo.

    As for the rest, if you couldn't function as a normal user in linux until graphical sudo came along, well, you were doing it wrong. Consider it a test, if you can't figure out how to go to a prompt and type sudo then perhaps you shouldn't be allowed near a computer.

    1. Re:Insightful? It's ignorant and dishonest. by Allador · · Score: 1

      UAC blocks you from running programs at system startup on your own computer.

      No, it doesnt. You simply set up a Scheduled Task entry to run on startup, and have it run as SYSTEM or an account with the right privileges. This is trivial stuff.

      There _may_ be some software that cant run without an interactive desktop, which you wouldnt be able to run this way, but thats a conscious design choice by the 3rd party software makers.

      How do you think all the anti-virus, windows update, and other things run at startup without someone logging in? It's not magic.

      It helpfully says that your administrator has set up a system policy to disallow it (lies).

      I'm not sure what you're doing to see this, but its likely to be technically true, if possibly misleading. You may be (somehow) tripping over a default group policy setting that is blocking what you're trying to do. So if you're the administrator, just change it.

      You're in complete control over those kinds of settings. You may not automatically be magically granted the knowledge of how to change it, but thats no different than any other complex system on the planet.

      Add to that the pissing annoying virtual store technology that silently redirects activity aimed at files under Program Files to a directory under the user's private data area, without telling/warning/stopping anyone and screwing up multi-user uses of the machine (other users see a different version of the file).

      This isnt enabled by default. Just dont turn it on.

      If they wanted to have restricted areas maybe they should investigate some goddamn file permissions.

      They do have restricted areas, and they are restricted by the use of file permissions. I dont know what you're trying to say here.

  102. Re:Linux has UAC too by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

    Whose fault was the single user Windows 9x environment again?

  103. Re:Linux has UAC too by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

    WTF? Are you just trolling for mod points like most of the people posting here or what? UAC prompt to delete shortcut from desktop? Uhh?

    --
    This space for rent.
  104. Re:Same Desktop UI model we've had for the last 15 by synthesizerpatel · · Score: 1

    Yes, you can skin your program in Windows (And OSX, and whatever else), but there's a level of 'ease' in which it's unattainable to most folks.

    I wouldn't be surprised if we at some point see the concept from NeXT where the UI is structured drawing, NeXT tried postscript, I think they'd try SVG this time around. All old ideas become young again when reinvented.

    And thanks for the clarification on Office 2007, I misunderstood.

  105. Re:I think modern window systems by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

    Neither of you is completely correct. In Vista they dropped hardware acceleration for GDI. Anything that uses GDI is drawn by the CPU.

    Of course, it's not quite that simple because a window is a mix of system elements (hardware accelerated) and program elements (possibly not accelerated).

    AFAIK turning off Aero doesn't disable hardware acceleration though - non GDI window elements are still drawn by the GPU, and apps which don't use GDI at all (e.g. .NET based) get full acceleration.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  106. Re:Linux has UAC too by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 4, Informative

    UAC pops up asking you to elevate to delete a shortcut on the desktop, and then annoys you a SECOND time, asking if you're really sure you want to delete it. In Linux, you don't need root to delete a shortcut from your desktop.

    You misunderstand why the UAC dialog pops up. It's not the act of deleting the icon from your desktop. That doesn't require admin privs. What you fail to realize is that is a side effect of a feature of Windows called a "common desktop". Icons in the common desktop are shared with all accounts, they are meged with the icons in the users profile to create a single view.

    If you delete an icon from only your set of icons, no elevation is required. If you delete an icon from the shared desktop elevation is required because it affects multiple user accounts. The same feature exists for the start menu, in which you can have "shared" and "non-shared" shortcuts. You can delete the non-shared ones without elevation, but you can't delete the shared ones.

    I find the majority of people are like you. They simply don't understand why the UAC prompt is coming up. Perhaps that's a failure of Microsoft's, but one user should not be able to affect other users without elevating privilegs. It's working the way it's supposed to.

  107. Re:I think modern window systems by Vanders · · Score: 1

    The only problem with your logic is that you assume that modern 3D graphics cards are just as good at 2d rendering as they are at 3D. Unfortunately this is not the case.

    Not at all. 2D acceleration is a solved problem. The 2D engine takes up a fraction of the die space on a modern ASIC. Removing the 2D acceleration hardware creates more work than just leaving it the hell alone. Even if it hasn't improved since the R300 days, 2D acceleration on a Radeon (for example) is still more than fast enough for any normal windowing and compositing operations your desktop might want to do.

  108. Re:I think modern window systems by amirulbahr · · Score: 1

    The fonts are not rendering on the GPU. Anti-aliasing is accelerated.

  109. Wtf, it's like I'm watching OS in a browser... by X.25 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    They pretty much managed to make dialogs and all the other shit look like it's rendered through a browser engine.

    Is that the "future" of "visual candy"?

  110. Again you are mistaken by bhpaddock · · Score: 1

    Again you are mistaken.

    You cannot store arbitrary data in GPU memory without incurring significant penalties, in particular if you ever need to read from something stored in video memory as you'll stall the GPU pipe. The cases where it is beneficial are when that data is in a format that allows the GPU to actually do work on the data, where the data won't ever need to be read back into system memory. For rendering a desktop, the 3D acceleration capabilities are useful because they allow the window surfaces to be stored as textures in a DirectX format supported by the GPU, which the GPU can then scale, animate, and composite natively.

  111. My XPerience by Qbertino · · Score: 1

    I just got a Laptop for Christmas. Had a Vista Licence and XP preinstalled. Thought: "Ok. XP is on it, might as well take it for a ride." Installed all software I wanted to use on it. Netbeans/JavaFX, Gimp, Quake 3 Arena and some other stuff. Then it wouldn't shut down. Our Windows guy told me that when a app in userspace tries to do something like access WLAN and can't come by, Windows regularly freezes for 15 minutes or more on shutdown. Forced it through a powercycle and managed a shutdown without problems. Then I noticed WinXP accessing the HDD every second. Windows guy: "Oh, that's normal. You should be glad Vista wasn't preinstalled. Vista would be accessing the HDD constantly." Then he went on to tell me stories about WGA and how it kills your system after 30 days if it thinks your licence isn't valid.

    The last time I used Windows professionally was back in 2001. The last install of Windows I used for leisure (games) was Win2k in 2003 or something. The 2.5 hrs with WinXP were enough to shoo me away again for another 5 years at least.

    I can safely say that in my 23 years of computing - from obscure custom Sharp OSes and Commodore PET through early versions of DOS and Linux and Mac OS X - Windows XP, a proactively castrated piece of software, is one of the shittiest pieces of software I've come across. And I don't get the notion that Windows Vista is any better.

    How anybody except the most novice users with no or nearly no computing experience who have been tricked into buying a computer with todays shit from MS installed is totally beyond me.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
  112. Only for home users by Mutatis+Mutandis · · Score: 1

    This may be too optimistic. The situation you describes applies mostly for home users: Their suppliers had few other options than making sure that their software would run on Vista.

    But it doesn't really apply to other segments of the market. The Royal Navy recently put Windows in a nuclear submarine -- but they opted for Win 2K and XP. Most companies and large non-commercial buyers don't have applications that are that critical, but the smart ones still avoided Vista and are betting on moving from XP to Win 7. Many specialized software applications continued to run on XP, often the preferred OS for both vendor and customer.

    Of course that doesn't necessarily mean that the software can't be run under Vista: Most applications made with recent tools probably will. It does mean, however, that there will have been a minimal effort in optimizing and troubleshooting these applications with Vista. This will now have to be done with Win 7.

  113. couldn't agree more ... by rs232 · · Score: 1

    "Even if I WANTED to use tree structured semantic filenames I couldn't due to Filesystem path / name limits e.g. things like the following quickly get you beyond the 128 character limit:"

    Couldn't agree more, whatever happened to the database file system they were going to introduce in Longhorn in 2004, something similar to what was in BeOS since 1996 ..

    --
    davecb5620@gmail.com
  114. Re:Linux has UAC too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll admit, I run as root most of the time in Linux too, at least when I'm in a GUI. Know why? For most of Linux's history, it was a pain in the ass to not run as root. Only until recently have they had a good way to elevate privileges in the GUI. Guess what, that implementation is a hell of a lot like UAC. Guess what, I can live in Ubuntu as a normal user now and it will pop up a UAC-like dialog when an app needs elevation.

    i can't figure out if your sarcastic or not ?

    do you mean it's only for a few years gtksudo and kdesu are mature enough
    and why do you need to be root for GUI apps anyway ?

  115. Vista-like addons for XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    [...]instant Start Menu search[...] breadcrumb navigation in Windows Explorer [...] However, these are things that can be added to XP - I just wish the authors of such addons would refrain from making them look exactly like Vista, because that doesn't look good with my XP classic theme.

    Links to apps (I'm sure others exist too):

    Vista Start Menu

    breadcrumbs

  116. Re:Linux has UAC too by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    Allowing users to edit specific files with sudoedit? Check.

    I must admit I'm not knowledgeable about this (it's the first time I hear of sudoedit, and I've only ever used sudo in the most primitive way, by adding self to sudoers with full permissions), but isn't "allowing ... to edit specific files" something that should properly be handled by the normal OS security (file ACLs and so on)?

  117. Re:Bye bye Linux by Macka · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Ha! Shows just how little you understand the Linux ecosystem. If Linux based desktop technologies were proprietary; produced and promoted by a single company then MS would have every chance of killing them off: but they aren't. The desktop environments that front the Linux base (Gnome and KDE) are Open Source. Nothing can kill them bar lack of developer interest, and the two main candidates are alive, healthy and kicking. They will keep plodding on, growing, improving and snapping at MS's heals year after year after year. They are relentless and will not stop: not EVER. And this is a GOOD thing. It will keep MS (and Apple for that matter) on their toes and will force them to push their boundaries. Because if they stop for too long then they'll get caught and overtaken. Conversely, the more MS (and Apple) innovate, the more it inspires the likes of Gnome and KDE. All this means is that year on year, the choices you and I have as users get better and more interesting. We are the ones who ultimately benefit from all this. So all hail the Desktop wars, and long may they continue!

  118. Why call "Vista service pack 3" "Windows 7"? by BroncoInCalifornia · · Score: 1

    Why call "Vista service pack 3" "Windows 7"?

    I can see 2 reasons
    1) Microsoft can stop running bad adverts on TV telling people Vista is not as bad as they think it is.
    2) They can charge people who already have Vista to upgrade to service pack 3.

    --

    Religion is the main cause of atheism.

  119. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  120. Re:I think modern window systems by nschubach · · Score: 1

    Awesome... Microsoft articles telling everyone how great Microsoft technology is!

    I can point out several companies that have much better technology than their competition. I also have a phone number for an insurance agent that can produce documentation stating that their insurance company is better to it's customers than everyone else.

    --
    Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
  121. Actually, it can by Ghostgate · · Score: 1

    XP can not really do 64 bit.

    I get so tired of hearing this. Granted, XP x64 edition isn't really XP, it's a 64-bit version of Server 2003 renamed to XP, so technically you're right. That said I've been using it on my main system for over two years now and it works beautifully. I have 4 GB of RAM which is 100% utilized. ALL 32-bit apps I have tried work with no problems (you do have to get used to the two separate Program Files directories and the slight difference in the registry structure). I game a lot and have had no problems there whatsoever. Granted, I took the time when I first built this machine to make sure the hardware all had 64-bit drivers (Logitech in particular has great 64-bit support). I've had just a single blue screen in two years, caused by a failing video card which was quickly replaced. I'm also still using the original install of the OS - I've never needed to reinstall it. I'm no Microsoft fanboy, but if you make smart choices with your hardware, XP x64 is as good as it gets right now. And I'm one of those people that stuck with Windows 2000 over XP.

  122. Re:I think modern window systems by adolf · · Score: 1

    Whatever, kids.

    I tend to think it's like the "Do I need an FPU" question in the days of the 80286, 80386SX, and 80486SX.

    The answer is, obviously: Of course you do, if it makes what you'd like to be doing any faster than it might be without a FPU.

    That said: Vista works fine, on my almost-4-year-old laptop, with a not-so-special ATI X300 graphics chip and its not-so-spectacular-these-days 1.83GHz Pentium-M. Just fucking fine. With Aero. With only two gigs ($30?) of RAM. I like the prettiness, just as I do with Compiz on my Ubuntu machine.

    Of course, Vista works better on my SLI nVidia 9800GT, Q6600 desktop box, for sure. But not so much that I really prefer one over the other for anything but games.

    So what?

  123. Re:Links to the torrent (for Google impaired folks by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    All Microsoft betas are time-limited, so they are in effect trials.

    Yeah, it's still copyright infringement, technically, but in this case there is really no "losses" to claim.

  124. Re:I think modern window systems by ruemere · · Score: 1

    So, basically, if I do not use Clear Type or special effects, 3D is not necessary? Thought as much.

    Regards, Ruemere

  125. WOW64 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know that 64-bit Windows has always been able to run 32-bit software, right? The only thing you can't use is 32-bit drivers.

  126. Re:It isn't "eye candy" by Orbijx · · Score: 1

    Visually, the iPod's interface is 'pretty'. Interacting with it using the wheel is annoying all get out. When I want to go up a list, I want to press up to go there, instead of dragging a counterclockwise circle on the face of my music player. Likewise, going down, I want the same method: Press down. When I want to turn the thing off, can I just have a plain old power button to press, or a switch to flick, or something obvious?
    I actually feel embarrassed to admit to this, but I actually had to ask the friend who handed me his iPod how to turn the damn thing off.
    Holding play to turn it off is a bit counter-intuitive, once again.
    To agitate the point, the RCA Lyra, a much, much older digital audio player would simply have you press play to turn it on (makes sense), and then hold stop for 3 seconds to turn it off (also makes sense).

    I don't recall seeing a menu entry that suggests that you are turning off the iPod, or suspending it to low power, or something, but I think I may have been too agitated by the thing to have seen it.

    As for the car analogy that was there, yes, I've been behind the wheel of both, but I have a slight preference for the Metro. Could be the whole "I'm a car." versus the "There's more eagle under the floorboard. I'd hate to see you miss out on so much eagle." approach that I take to things.

    --
    One of these days, I am going to flip out. When I flip out, I'll be back in five minutes.
  127. Yes really by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

    A 20 year old Amiga 500 could do a GUI with it being fully responsive, and the massive advancement in graphics hardware, even when not fully utilising the GPU, is still more than enough to handle the increase in screen resolution since then.

    Yes, a GPU can use more tricks that Aero might use. But you have not provided any evidence that these make the slightest bit of difference in Vista. You're like the people who claim things would be done faster in assembler even before actually writing it. Things only make a difference in performance if it's a bottleneck, and the only way to find out is to test it.

    Even when fully using the GPU, you still have lots of information travelling across to the graphics card, as the CPU still does a lot, which causes the screen to change, not to mention software that still uses the CPU to draw graphics or otherwise affect the appearance of the application.

    I'm also not sure you understand how graphics cards work. It's been years since the CPU had to be used to laboriously draw every pixel - even on the Amiga, there were specialised chips to quickly draw blocks of memory. What's changed with the GPU is that the graphics processor is now a fully fledged processor (i.e., turing complete, and hence can run any program on it).

  128. Re:This beta exceeds the quality of any other Micr by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You admit that you gave up on Microsoft / Windows in 1999
    "I gave up when Windows 2000 came out and they started shoveling more user level stuff into the kernel and they never fixed the security system. That was in 1999, over 8 years ago..."

    So, what your saying is that windows 2000 wasn't an improvement over NT4 or Win98/Me? If you can't provide constructive criticism/comments then STFU and go crawl back in the hole in which you came out of troll.

  129. Re:Linux has UAC too by Enderandrew · · Score: 1

    I'm a SysAdmin. I understand an "All Users" Desktop concept. The problem is that users don't. The interface just annoys them. Furthermore, placing icons on the "All Users" desktop is the wrong way to go, because either people can't change them and they're pissed, or they can change them, and it affects other users. Move those icons to the "Default User" folder, or for new installs, to each user's desktop. In Linux, each account gets individual icons on their desktop. Thusly they don't need root access to affect other people.

    --
    http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
  130. Re:This beta exceeds the quality of any other Micr by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You mean 2009 will be the year of the Linux desktop?

    *yawn*

  131. Re:Bye bye Linux by setagllib · · Score: 1

    Am I seriously the only person who suspects that i7 is short for i786? We've had i686 for a very long time.

    --
    Sam ty sig.
  132. Re:Linux has UAC too by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

    I agree, which is why I said Microsoft may be to blame for that. But that doesn't change the fact the UAC is doing what it's supposed to, preventing one user from interfering with another.

    The All Users function was always a bit of a hack anyways, but it makes a lot of sense from a locked down desktop perspective where users do not get administrative privs. It's just bad when you have multiple users with admin privs using the same machine (or even a single user with admin privs and apps that are installed as 'all users").

  133. Why is the daughter an admin? by Mr+44 · · Score: 1

    There is no point in doing anything with that machine if you don't tell dad to make his daughter a separate, non-admin account. That is advice that would be taken for granted with linux, but no OS can do anything for you if you have a teenager who is downloading and running P2P software while logged in as an admin.

    1. Re:Why is the daughter an admin? by shatfield · · Score: 1

      Mr. Perfect World meet Mr. Real Situation.

      The dad and mom don't have the time nor inclination to maintain separate user accounts. They made her promise not to install any of that stuff and she agreed, and now that she knows the real world results of installing that software, I think she has learned her lesson.

      I offered to set up separate accounts for them, but they opted out. I got a great dinner out of the deal, so I'm hoping it happens again... soon. I always look on the bright side of things ;-)

      --
      "To make a mistake is only human; to persist in a mistake is idiotic." Cicero
  134. HILARIOUS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Now that's offtopic for saying the parent was on topic, and the parent is fixed by labeling him a troll.

    Yep, the mod system is here for your amusement.

    1. Re:HILARIOUS by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 1

      The slashdot mod system is the best proof ever that humans will abuse power, no matter how small and pitiful the power is. It's a great study on human nature. ;)

      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
  135. My fav: WordPad gets the Ribbon interface by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I mean, seriously.. WordPad?

  136. Agreed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I like the taskbar and quicklaunch, even the start menu (classic). New stuff looks more and more like apple. If that is what we're going to get, we'd be better off getting an apple. *sigh*

    Make it boot fast, run fast and light. Save the hardware resources for the programs we use!!

  137. Juan Pablo Kaukian by dudentag · · Score: 1

    Microsoft will be microsoft 4 ever. No body will change that. Only work for play games, nothing else.

  138. Re:Links to the torrent (for Google impaired folks by Jamie's+Nightmare · · Score: 1

    Perhaps because ReactOS is "not recommended for everyday use", as indicated on it's website. I've used it. It's a cute idea, but about as stable as dynamite in a smelting plant.

    --
    "When you see a unixer brainwashed beyond saving, kick him out of the door." - Xah Lee
  139. Exaggeration. by Junta · · Score: 1

    There is application and driver compatibility. Their track record with applications has been relatively decent (The notable exception was migrating Win9x market to NT kernel, where a large number of things didn't work right). Drivers they break relatively commonly.

    Essentially, I would give them about equal score on compatibility since XP release that I would give glibc ("Linux" would be a misnomer, the kernel strictly speaking hasn't been perfectly consistant on syscalls and glibc has abstracted it away on occasion, and "Linux" as a term for an OS includes things like Python, that have *not* maintained good compatibility, regardless of running on Linux or Windows). Linux inherently breaks binary drivers and frequently the API to compile against, just like Windows.

    --
    XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
  140. I'm Not Very Excited by Juln · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    All of the marketing 'buzz' around this - oops, I mean journalistic excitement - certainly has a manufactured feel, which is right in line with every MS product for the past 8 years at least.

    I approached Vista similarly to how I approached Windows 98 - having not used MS's products for several years, I thought I'd give it a chance and give them the benefit of a doubt for having worked out past deficiencies. I bought a laptop and didn't go out of my way to avoid Vista.

    Vista has performed about as well as Windows 98. Explorer (the task bar portion) crashes 2-3 times a week. The system has been been 'losing' my audio driver lately, and gives conflicted information about this. The configuration options are still a strange mix of sophisticated and primitive, and very vague and indefinite compared to Linux. I would be a fool to think that Windows 7 is going to be any different. I'm quite confident that this will be, like Vista, a window washing on an old OS, and that I'll be sticking with Linux, which keeps getting better and better.

    --
    Juln
  141. Re:I think modern window systems by scoot80 · · Score: 1

    I'll have to argue the point that OS X does GUI better/more functional. I personally hate the Mac OS interface. The file manager sucks, the dock is pretty but crap (keeping track of open applications and its windows).. You can't tell me that is better than what Windows does. But each to their own I guess.

  142. I'll give Apple one thing.. by Junta · · Score: 1

    Their approach of compiling both ('Universal Binaries') conveniently in their SDK really smoothed the transition from PPC to x86. And I haven't seen MS do something analogous, but it is a tad harder to do without re-doing their executable format or application packaging strategies. It they add a third architecture (x86_64), it certainly would be slicker. I will say we can't call in advance what they will do.

    Single install media for both editions and taking that page from Apple's playbook would be interesting, but undoubtedly at least the latter is patent encumbered.

    --
    XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
  143. Re:I think modern window systems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you trying to add value to the conversation? Or post pointless comments to show off how cool you are? Grow up.

  144. Re:I think modern window systems by HBI · · Score: 1

    Load XP on the same hardware and give a honest comparison.

    If you are happy with slow, then i'm glad you are. Happy people are a good thing. But Vista is slow.

    --
    HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
  145. My Personal Favourite New Feature: by Skythe · · Score: 1

    "The classic single-column start menu is no longer available"
    *rejoices*
    I'll never have to watch friends and family use that 14 year old UI feature^H^H^H^H^H^Heyesore again.

  146. Nice link by symbolset · · Score: 1

    And.... here's a quote...

    To use the provided Windows Vista, simply follow the instructions provided. To use the Downgrade Right to Microsoft Windows XP Professional, simply start the system.

    So not only does it have XP rights, it's XP that's installed. Cute.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
  147. Some KDE people are nothing but hypocrites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't get me wrong, I love KDE and I been a KDE user since the 1.x days.

    I write this because I constantly hear how Windows 7 looks like KDE4, and it's true, it looks similar, and no, I don't like it, I prefer KDE.

    But you guys should seriously admit that KDE4 has copied a lot from the Vista style, and you should stop pointing your finger at how Win7 copies Oxygen (KDE4 style), because KDE4 has been copying a lot from Vista too, and when you point at others doing the same that you do, you only look like a bunch of hypocrites.

    1. Re:Some KDE people are nothing but hypocrites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      :)

      You know that most of us like to annoy them. This is slashdot afterall.

      Since the first windows (big) graphical revolution Microsoft copied a lot of ideas from other OSs. I'll point out some that I've noticed:

      1) The Windows XP Start Menu with most used apps. That function was available on KDE way before Windows XP was called XP.

      2) The Windows Vista Explorer where the path is showed as a sequence of buttons instead of a single textbox. That was first presented on Gnome.

      3) The Windows Vista app Quick launch on start menu, that was always available on almost every WM I know except on Windows.

      4) All the Vista decorations and eye crapiness, failed attempt to give same functionality as Beryl/Compiz/OSX.

      Well.. It is probable that these ideas above were first seen on another OSs/WMs, although this is meant to be some kind of state-of-the-art examples.

  148. Simple test by benwaggoner · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Get Vista running on a DX9 capable machine.

    Open up a reasonable number of apps, with windows scattered around the screen. For extra credit, have them being actually animating something (video playback, whatever)

    Open up Task Manager and look at the CPU utilization bars.

    Turn off Aero Glass

    Grab a big foreground window and shake it like crazy over your other windows.

    Turn Aero Glass back on

    Repeat shake

    Note that without Aero Glass you get a huge CPU spike due to all the rendering that doesn't get offloaded to the CPU, while with Aero Glass you won't see a similar spike in CPU activity.

    1. Re:Simple test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Open up Task Manager and look at the CPU utilization bars.

      Turn off Aero Glass

      Grab a big foreground window and shake it like crazy over your other windows.

      Turn Aero Glass back on

      Repeat shake

      Install WinXP on the same machine

      Repeat shake

      Note that on WinXP, you don't get a huge spike even without Aero Glass

      Note that without Aero Glass you get a huge CPU spike

      Which only goes to show what a craptastic job MS has done with the graphics layer in Vista.

  149. Re:I think modern window systems by nschubach · · Score: 1

    I was pointing out something obvious to someone who apparently can't see that it's so obvious. Of course a link to Microsoft articles on Vista technology are going to "sell" those features. If you don't consider that value, then you are being ignorant of that fact as well.

    --
    Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
  150. Please Pass to EVERYONE IN YOUR ADDRESS BOOK! by aqk · · Score: 0, Troll

    This IS TRUE!
    Microsoft has confirmed it!
    Norton and AOL have said IT IS TRUE!
    It is THE BEST BROWSER EVER!
    You MUST BELIEVE This!

    Please pass this to EVERYONE IN YOUR ADDRESS BOOK!

    .

  151. Re:This beta exceeds the quality of any other Micr by Locutus · · Score: 1

    to some, security, reliability and performance are requirements for a computer OS. Microsoft has failed year after year at building a solid base OS. And now people are supposed to believe Windows 7/2010 they are finally going to get it right? Talk about being in a hole.

    LoB

    --
    "Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
  152. Re:This beta exceeds the quality of any other Micr by Locutus · · Score: 1

    Hey Microserf moron, how does embedded, netbooks, and MIDs turn into desktops? Typical AC moronic drivel.

    LoB

    --
    "Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
  153. Jeri Ryan for W7 Spokesborg by symbolset · · Score: 1

    Make the product "hot". This is how you turn the Borg Bill meme to your advantage. Everybody knows geeks fantasize about being assimilated by Jeri Ryan. Then bring back Bill as a commercial actor as a Borg and remind us why "It's good to be king." Spin off some merchandising.

    They won't, though. Probably shoot 30 seconds of some balding guy on his analyst's couch saying something like "I like this Seven more than Mojave." Marketing idiots!

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
    1. Re:Jeri Ryan for W7 Spokesborg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      jeri ryan hasn't played a borg since 2001, the year windows xp was released

      p.s. she's 40 now

  154. Your assumption is incorrect. by bhpaddock · · Score: 2, Informative

    The OS does no checking on files you work with. Windows Media Player will of course check media files you play to see if they are DRM'd, just as every media player does. This is part of the process by which it determines the media format type, i.e. is it an MP3? A WMA? A DRM'd WMA? This works exactly the same on Vista as on XP, and is the same sort of check iTunes and other apps do. There is no overhead here beyond that required to determine the difference between an MP3 and a WMA, and it only occurs at the time a file is loaded.

    What Vista provides above and beyond XP is something called Protected Media Path. This is similar to Windows XP's Certified Output Protection Protocol, but more sophisticated.

    Protected Media Path allows for a great many possible restrictions on both audio and video output, including those defined by HDCP. And since it is a protected process, it allows decoders to be run in a context that prevents them from being manipulated or attacked (i.e. having their memory scanned for secret keys and such). Whether there is any overhead for using PMP to host your decoder is debateable, if there is any it should be negligible at worst. It's the same code running, whether it runs in your app's process or in mfpmp.exe instead. Yes there's IPC overhead, but lots of media player do out-of-proc hosting anyway so that a bad decoder won't crash the media player and to dodge certain security issues like heap spraying attacks.

    What's important, though, is that this is an API that applications *CAN* use, not something that is imposed on applications or users. The Protected Media Path code will only get loaded and used if an application specifically calls MFCreatePMPMediaSession. It will cause the application-provided code to be hosted inside the protected process (mfpmp.exe). You won't see mfpmp.exe running unless an application has specifically invoked it via that API call - which would most likely happen because you are playing a BluRay disc with a player that has decided to make use of PMP.

    Windows Media Player on Vista does use PMP for all media decoding, and suffers no ill effects from it. However, you do have a problem with it, just use Winamp or some other player that doesn't invoke PMP.

    Like I said, having the support for DRM or output protections like HDCP won't affect you at all if you don't use media (or applications) that request or require that support. It just allows developers to run their code in a protected space and place what restrictions they want on their content. It make no determination about whether such restrictions are necessary, wise, or just. It's just an API. APIs can be used for good or for evil, if you have a problem with how a BluRay app uses the PMP API, then complain to Sony or the app developer =)

    1. Re:Your assumption is incorrect. by ushimitsudoki · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the response. I guess I'm slow because I can't wrap my head around the assertion that there is "absolutely ZERO impact on people who don't use DRM'd media".

      Admittedly, I don't use Vista - and I'm basing my opinion on this article I read a long time ago - but it seems to be both by "common-sense" and "real figuring" (like in the article), all the DRM stuff that was added in Vista does have some impact. Even on those who wouldn't be using DRM'ed files.

      --
      Me and U(buntu) - my blog about Ubun
    2. Re:Your assumption is incorrect. by benwaggoner · · Score: 1

      Guttmann's article hasn't ever been useful for anyone as far as I can tell. Reading it again, I can't think of a single falsifiable prediction he's made that hasn't been falsified :).

      I know it's been quoted and linked widely for years, but I can't see any of the predictions of problems he made pre Vista launch that haven't been disproven by reality since.

  155. I don't think fair comparison is even possible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd like to mention that I'm running XP right now, and I'm perfectly happy with it, but I wasn't always happy. It surprises me to see the multitudes of people that forget how crappy XP was before SP2.

    That said, I'd also like to mention that a lot of the "fixes" in Windows 7 are just making the OS do what XP already does, but with an improved GUI (can run on a netbook, fast response times, etc). In my opinion what needs to happen is for a completely new OS to be developed. What's holding MS back right now is the need to make every new OS backwards compatible. That's all well and good, but if everybody's going to complain anyways that none of the programs work on the new OS, and all the companies are going to have to develop new programs and drivers for the new OS, why not just forget making it backwards compatible? If MS developed an OS around a secure platform instead of developing a secure platform for an existing OS, perhaps a lot of us would be more happy. Another often overlooked consequence of making an OS backwards compatible is that it makes the OS very clunky, and dull of code that really isn't necessary.

    Honestly, I don't plan on checking back here anytime soon, so feel free to rant all you want about how I'm wrong and what not, but I find now that fair comparison between Windows 7, Vista, and XP is not even possible. XP is good, solid, trustworthy, and fairly good looking. Vista is slow, shaky, but very visually appealing. As far as I know, Windows 7 is just an attempt at combining the best aspects of both of these systems.

    1. Re:I don't think fair comparison is even possible by Fuzzypig · · Score: 1

      Well said! Apple, happily did it, with the PPC, OSX, Intel wotnot compatibility malarky. You want to run old software, stay on the old kit! You want new and shiny? Better get on to Amazon and start ordering the upgrades on those products you love using 'cos the buggers won't work on this new one!

      --
      Windows guys please stop pissing on everyone and the Linux guys stop pissing in the wind, hoping to hit Windows guys!
  156. What should Microsoft do? by simplerThanPossible · · Score: 1

    Is there anything Microsoft could do to improve on Windows XP? Or have they run out of runway? DOS was improved on by Windows 3.1, improved on by Windows 95, improved on by Windows XP... but the previous systems all had serious limitations. What is the serious limitation of Windows XP?

    The prettier aero GUI is an improvement - nice, but doesn't seem to be needed. They now sell XP home on eee PCs for $40 - that improves on price (but price-cutting is a company's last resort, when they have nothing better to offer). I guess security (viruses, malware) was a big issue. Microsoft might have done better by introducing a new OS to fix the security problems of Windows XP, instead of the free service packs (which were really quite excellent). Then, the upgrade would have been needed.

    What should Microsoft do to make a new OS that's worthwhile? Improve on:

    features? performance? reliability? convenience? price?

    1. Re:What should Microsoft do? by Fuzzypig · · Score: 1

      Like you pointed out, all very shiny but not much else. Rather ironic that MS products are a reflection of today's facile society, all gloss and nothing to show. As my old, late dear Grandma would say, "All mouth and no trousers!".

      They need to give limited shiny stuff, works for OSX and Gnome, get back to making sure the engine actually works correctly. Work on a usuable UAC system, take a good long look at what is allowing the nasties to get in so easily. If it means cutting out the compatibility to DOS/Win98, then so be it. Sell limited cheap licenses for old XP/2K, fix fatal flaws only, if people want to stay on the old.

      Start supporting today's sh*t-hot hardware, get the 64bit version up to spec, a lot of gamers out there with money to burn! No more 64bit as an afterthought. Yes I know most people are on 32bit, but for every 3 year old 32 bit system, there are an equal number of 64bit gamer systems being replaced every year.

      What about a PAYG system? You get core system for nominal fee but it's yours. You want shiny extras, you download and rent them on a monthly basis. You want extra cores enabled? You pay rental on the extensions. Still works in the mainframe market and mini markets. PAYG you get clean simple builds without crap and if you want shiny crap you pay extra for it, MS still gets revenue. Although most people wouldn't use IE for free, let alone rent it!

      --
      Windows guys please stop pissing on everyone and the Linux guys stop pissing in the wind, hoping to hit Windows guys!
  157. Dear aunt, by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1
  158. Re:I think modern window systems by Elrond,+Duke+of+URL · · Score: 1

    I don't think this is entirely true. In many cases, 2D actions can be thought of as special cases of more generic 3D algorithms. Because of this, the same hardware can be utilized to perform what seems to be "2D" acceleration.

    You're probably correct that neither ATI nor Nvidia spends much time optimizing 2D routines, but I would argue that modern CPUs and GPUs are so fast that there is no need to spend much more time optimizing 2D code paths. Outside of a benchmark no user will ever notice a difference, even with something that really does a lot of 2D work.

    Of course, there are plenty of other good reasons to use a 3D compositing window manager.

    --
    Elrond, Duke of URL
    "This is the most fun I've had without being drenched in the blood of my enemies!"-Sam&Max
  159. World Prices 201 by Ostracus · · Score: 1

    Hehe. I'm just having a smile-day today. Upgrading memory and a video card is considered "substantial" these days? Anyway for those you've never ordered a piece of hardware in say...the past few months. Computer hardware prices have dropped like a rock. You basically can build an entire machine for under $500.00. $200.00 can get you a nice flat-panel.

    --
    Shai Schticks:"You don't make peace with friends, you make peace with enemies"
    1. Re:World Prices 201 by PrescriptionWarning · · Score: 1

      I agree, on a personal basis that money is worth it for me, because I'm a PC enthusiast

      my friends who pull in half or less than what I do per year however can not rationalize spending one or two hundred bucks since they only use their PC for internet, communications, and music

      as far as work goes, how many companies will be willing to shell out the extra few hundred to upgrade all the hardware for all the workstations in addition to the price of upgrading the software? That's a lot of money and a lot of new IT headaches.

  160. Re:I think modern window systems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your comment boils down to "you are not using your PC to the fullest if you disable system sounds". ;-)

    Really, all modern video cards offer stellar 2D performance; the acceleration required for that is easily provided in a very small portion of the total GPU chip area. It's true they are designed for 3D games (apart from some integrated solutions) but then again, what Aero Glass demands is minuscule compared to what Crysis demands, so the GPUs are partly idling then anyway. In the realm of 2D, ATI/AMD cards have some issues with HiDef video stream acceleration, but that is likely a driver issue, not due to lack of capability (or flaws) in the Avivo transcoder.

    From my personal experience, Vista is lightning quick in 2D mode with 3D accelerated eye candy turned off. You should really try it for yourself first. :-)

  161. Re:I think modern window systems by Kagura · · Score: 1

    Why wouldn't you use ClearType, unless your monitor is borked?

  162. Re:It isn't "eye candy" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think you are somewhat confusing "eye candy" and "ergonomy". The iPod has excellent ergonomy. and lo and behold, the interface (as well as the overall appearance of the device) is very *simple*. I do completely disagree with you about Vista's interface. That's okay, we can amicably agree to disagree. I just hope that you notice that your views are your personal preferences; you don't really portray them as such.

    I find Aero Glass very unintuitive and messy. It feels like controls have been scattered around needlessly, there are illogical visual elements (form without any function), even the transparency serves just to distract my focus from my work, and I feel less informed of the particular steps the OS is taking when I attempt an administrative task. Opinions opinions, to each their own, et cetera, but please do remember that user mileages will vary. I do believe that some of my dislikes are fairly subjective and would be easy to argue for, but of course I have similar dislikes about Aqua and Gnome and KDE, and going into more detail would probably invite flamers here, so I'll just digress here. Hope this was useful. :-)

  163. Re:I think modern window systems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All this is about WPF applications also, not GDI. Most applications in use today are GDI. GDI is unaccelerated with WDDM 1.0. However, it will be accelerated with WDDM 1.1 in Windows 7, but I'm not sure which features will be.

  164. Re:I think modern window systems by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

    No arguments on Finder being a somewhat crappy file manager, but after using a bit I find the dock to be much, much faster to use than the windows taskbar. As you said though, to each their own.

    BTW, there are a few third party file managers for Mac OS X that are a bit better. I'm not currently using them (file management, aside from simply launching/opening stuff, is one of the very few things that I've always found to be more comfortable from the command line, so I generally just drop to a terminal when I need to move/copy stuff around), but I have used a few in the past and they were an improvement.

    --
    "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
  165. such a beautiful rant... by ovu · · Score: 1

    brought a tear to my eye...

  166. Re:Linux has UAC too by somenickname · · Score: 1

    That sounds more like a bug than a feature. Why should the way I choose to view my desktop have any effect on the way others choose to view theres? Your description of the reason this happens seems logical but, the fact that it happens is beyond comprehension.

  167. my own 2c... by pjr.cc · · Score: 1

    Since vista came out I've been pretty much linux-only at the desktop (prior to that it was probably 50/50 and i've been at it alot longer then probably 99.9% of people using linux today) and for the most part I like it. However, there are some things I find hard to tolerate.

    First, people say linux is snappy. well, thats very subjective (i've seen "snappy vista") and the applications that run on top of it are often the pain. So my start menu comes up nice and quick? Wow, well firefox 3 on linux still isnt anywhere near as snappy and responsive as firefox 2 on XP. Anyone seen chrome on XP/Vista lately by the way, im praying to god chrome will be the answer to my web browsing pain under linux. But thats just me.

    Second thing, about eye candy. I (off and on) run compiz for 1 really simple thing, the window shading - practically every OS does it but its quite useful to be able to look at a screen cluttered with windows and know where one begins and the next ends... More on that, I also appreciate a "small" window manager. I.e. one with very very little wasted screen space (Another reason i love chrome) and KDE 3.x used to be able to provide that. Then kde 4 (and yes i've tried the 4.x releases too) came out - a bloated WM that suddenly needed twice the screen real estate just for the window borders!?!?!?!. That was frustrating. I've tried fvwm (what i used to use ages and ages ago), and many others. But at the end of the day I bring up firefox or evolution or thunderbird or whatever and i'm forced to look at this massive amount of whitespace between buttons and menus.

    I think, if you asked alot of desktop users, they'd want a "nice" desktop that utilised screen real estate while being able to be "pretty", I think compiz delivers on part of that in the prettiness sense (though could leave some desires for a bit more user friendliness on the finger-yoga key bindings), but its hard to find something that works well without looking like a desktop white-space hog. As an example, look at nautilus, look at the whitespace between the text in a button and the edge of the button (or just the location bar and the main tool bar, then compare it at the same resolution to explorer side-by-side - im not talking about the actual file list by the way, just the bars at the top)... what a waste of space. For a while I thought xfce might have been a valid choice, but im still searching!

    As for MACOS X, i dont know how people stand that interface, but thats me!

    As for W7 beta 1, well, the screen shots dont really tell you much when it comes down to it and i'm unlikely to listen to vague "its so much snappier" remarks with nothing backing it up... its quite bizare anyone would make a post about how its "so much snappier" and then give you static screen shots... They certainly don't answer any questions along the lines of "here's all the things you hate about vista removed!". After all, when it comes to "snappy", windows XP (and even vista) are snappy when first installed (on current hardware)... go figure, show me something that makes sence. I.e. show me a machine where vista will suck and windows 7 will not, then i'll be impressed. After all, the hardware has gone a long way to catching up when it comes to vista-pain.

  168. Re:Linux has UAC too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wait a second, are you telling me that a Linux fan made a negative judgment about something in a Microsoft product without taking the time to look details of the situation? Shocking, I tell you, shocking!

  169. Re:Linux has UAC too by AlexMax2742 · · Score: 1

    DOS's? How do you think all that DOS software would have worked in a multi-user environment? And please, convince me that DOS, an operating system designed for the 80's microcomputer and personal computer market, needed a multi-user environment from its inception. I need a good laugh today. (And yes, I know that UNIX had been around since the 70's, we're talking about personal computers here)

    It wasn't until Windows XP that they were successfully able to migrate their userbase to NT itself, let alone baby steps towards a true multiuser environment like Vista did.

    --
    I'm the guy with the unpopular opinion
  170. A note about eye candy by BurfCurse · · Score: 1

    Why all the bitching about eye candy? I for one welcome a change in scenery. I stare at a computer screen for 14+ hours a day. After spending the last 6 years staring at XP, its nice to look at something different. Its the same reason people like to repaint their bedroom every couple of years. We get tired of looking at the same old shit. I'm not going to say that Vista doesn't have its share of problems. Just quit bitching about the eye candy.

  171. Re:I think modern window systems by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

    Probably because it takes that long to load the control panel and icons off your HDD. Your GeForce 8600 and render hundreds of millions of polygons per second and has enough memory to store 58 full 24 bit 1920x1280 screens worth of graphics in it's memory, so it's not for lack of graphics performance.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  172. Good job John (nice to see someone @ /. say truth) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Very good John...

    (AND, it's very nice to see someone here actually KNOWS & UNDERSTANDS something about how User32 + GDI work, while in combination with video card drivers (& many of the "Windows graphical primitives" being in place onboard the vidcard's OWN circuitry), also)

    NOTE, as to Windows video card assist in hardware - It's actually been going on longer than back as far as Windows 9x as you stated: Back in the Windows 3.x 16-bit days, "Windows Accelerator vidcards" did the same.

    APK

  173. Still available by tepples · · Score: 1

    so here is then the next question, are the added features of Vista/win 7 worth it?

    Windows XP is on a sales moratorium apart from netbooks and the "downgrades" for which OEMs have started to charge extra. Windows Vista is not. Isn't continued availability enough of a feature?

    What do you have available that you did not previously and does this make life more efficient?

    A newly purchased computer perhaps?

  174. Re:Linux has UAC too by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

    Ah right it was the fault of the product, not the fault of the people in charge of it. It's so clear now.

  175. 2.4 gig of plain stuff? compared to 2k3server? by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

    Come on, you get nothing for 2.4gig DVD?
    Im sure there is bloat there. Whats the contents of the dvd by size?

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
  176. thats an application problem by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

    You really need 2gig of 24bit samples in ram at the same time?

    The application could/cache/load it when needed. And if this is your profession, and your HD is too slow, then buy a 512gig SSD drive, im sure as a professional its affordable.

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
  177. Windows 7 ?? by Gothmolly · · Score: 1

    Weren't they supposed to release a new OS after XP, but then only ever came out with a series of shitty, user un-friendly, broken betas ?

    --
    I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
  178. Re:I think modern window systems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why is it stupid little SHITS like you think you know a damned thing? You're obviously too much of a NOOB to know anything worthwhile, so do yourself and the rest of us a huge favor, and shut the FUCK up.

  179. Re:I think modern window systems by adolf · · Score: 1

    The machine came with XP Pro. I ran it that way for a year or two, and installed Vista Business a few weeks after it was released.

    It's as fair a comparison as any.

    It works fine. Suspending and resuming works more reliably than it ever did with XP. And Vista's firewall (which works differently for different wireless SSIDs -- perfect for a portable machine that pops up on various random networks) and start menu are vastly superior -- superior enough that, for me, it's worth any extra pain involved. Which, really, there isn't any of. (At least, once Readyboost is turned off.)

  180. Re:I think modern window systems by Allador · · Score: 1

    When you turn aero off, you turn off the compositing window manager, which is what works as you describe.

    So you're back to the bad old XP and before days of tearing and such.

  181. Re:I think modern window systems by Allador · · Score: 1

    That slow-down you're seeing has nothing to do with drawing/rendering.

    It has to do with windows reading all the control panel entries off disk (which seem to get flushed out of the disk cache quite easily) and pulling all the icons and such. If you watch your disk or resource manager while its happening it becomes clear.

  182. But everything in that article is made up. by bhpaddock · · Score: 1

    It's totally bogus. None of it makes any sense or applies to the actual Windows Vista OS, and none of its predictions about Vista ever came true.

    It said Vista would end unified drivers. It did not.
    It said device drivers would become more complex / less reliable, and they have not. In fact, quite the opposite is true.
    It says that drivers or devices coudl be and would be "revoked." This has never happened and there's no basis for claiming it's even possible.
    It says that somehow hardware will cost more, but Vista (and Win7) runs on the same hardware as XP or Mac OS.
    It makes all sorts of ridiculous claims about how Vista requires devices drivers to "poll" for some undescribed something or other that will make things slow, but such requirements do not exist. Heck, Vista supports the very same drivers that worked on Windows XP for most hardware.

    It quotes hearsay about mfpmp.exe using CPU cycles while playing MP3 files, while not referring at all to the PMP documentation or noting that these are the CPU cycles necessary to *decode the MP3 file* - as mfpmp.exe is the host process for decoders. In the past those same cycles would have been used inside wmplayer.exe. No new CPU usage was added, it was only moved.

    I find it especially ironic that you're here evangelizing such disinformation while admitting that you don't actually use the OS and haven't done any research at all into the authenticity of the claims made by the single document you're using as the basis for your claims. It's ironic because these are very much like the so-called Fear, Uncertainty, Denial attacks which Slashdotters used to blast Microsoft for making against its competition. I guess what's good for the goose is good for the gander, eh?

    1. Re:But everything in that article is made up. by ushimitsudoki · · Score: 1

      Excuse me? I'm not *evangelizing* jack shit. I said *why* I think something - clearly identified both my source and (in)experience with the topic - and thanked people that provided comments.

      People can do that, you know? State what they think and then listen to what other people have to say - it's how intelligent people refine their opinions.

      The dude from MS said a full day before your personal attack that the article didn't hold up - that was good enough for me, because it's not something I care enough about to research any further. Just like my newly refined opinion of you.

      --
      Me and U(buntu) - my blog about Ubun
    2. Re:But everything in that article is made up. by bhpaddock · · Score: 1

      Admittedly I confused you with the person who posted the original DRM comment. You have my apologies for that. But still, you said:

      "It seems to be both by "common-sense" and "real figuring" (like in the article), all the DRM stuff that was added in Vista does have some impact. Even on those who wouldn't be using DRM'ed files."

      That seems to me like you're propogating the same disinformation. Even the phrase "all the DRM stuff that was added to Vista" is a loaded statement that misrepresents the facts. In truth, there wasn't that much DRM stuff added to Vista, just some improvements on support that was already in Windows XP.

  183. You answered your own question. by bhpaddock · · Score: 1

    That issue had nothing to do with DRM, it had to do with CPU scheduling / network throttling behavior designed to provide a better media experience, and a bug / oversight in the associated code.

    1. Re:You answered your own question. by Daengbo · · Score: 1

      It was a joke. Did you read my post where I said that it was not actually a DRM issue (despite Slash headlines) and linked to the technical explanation. I also said Vista and XP are on par WRT benchmarks, meaning DRM isn't slowing anything down.

      Read, dude!

    2. Re:You answered your own question. by bhpaddock · · Score: 1

      Sorry, your post was a little confusing so I wasn't sure what you were trying to get across there =P

  184. I am certain of it. by bhpaddock · · Score: 1

    Why would support for DRM restrictions impact performance or stability? That's just ridiculous. That's like saying having a password on your computer will make it slower. Well, there's more code to handle password authentication, and yeah the OS needs to do the appropriate checks to make sure you're authenticated. But does it make the system less stable? Of course not. Does it slow it down in a perceivable way? Of course not.

    More importantly, "support for DRM'd media" and "support for the restrictions of DRM'd media" are the same thing. If you want to play BluRay movies, you have to accept the limitations imposed by the BluRay standard. That's just the way it is, at least in the world of legally licensed software.

    I have no complaints about it. Most of my machines never play any such material, and so no DRM-related code ever runs on them. My media center PC has a BluRay drive connected to my Samsung LCD via a DVI to HDMI converter, and I play BluRay movies with PowerDVD at 1080p and use an optical output connection to my receiver. I don't know what DRM or other content protection measures PowerDVD employs or makes use of, but I do know that I have never experienced any problems at all with that setup.

    1. Re:I am certain of it. by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      Why would support for DRM restrictions impact performance or stability? That's just ridiculous. That's like saying having a password on your computer will make it slower.

      Unrelated. A password prompt does its job and then normal execution continues. The DRM codepath is constantly checking the integrity of the restricted data as it works its way from media to monitor to make sure that Evil Pirates aren't making copies. If you don't understand that then you don't understand Windows's DRM support.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    2. Re:I am certain of it. by bhpaddock · · Score: 1

      I am a developer on the Windows team, I think I understand quite a bit.

      Perhaps you should re-read the post to which you replied. A password prompt is useless if the OS doesn't check actions (like attempts to access a file) to compare the account the user authenticated with against the permissions or access control lists on the file or other securable object. Do you really think that having user accounts and passwords doesn't involve any additional work after you've logged in? Quite the contrary, nearly every action you perform results in access control checks, on any operating system you choose.

      If you don't understand that then you don't understand how software works.

  185. Re:I think modern window systems by ruemere · · Score: 1

    It hurts my eyes. Slim font face is much easier to read for me.

    Regards,
    Ruemere

  186. points vs points by dbcad7 · · Score: 1

    When first reading your post, my initial reaction was to just tell you to stop fretting over mod points and to get over it.. what does it matter ?.. However, you actually succeeded in making a point of the "non mod" variety.

    There are of course a number of people who will follow the crowd, or trends, and go with what's popular just for the feeling of belonging I suppose.. There are those who place way too much importance on the mod system, and probably follow these trends to gain these "valuable" mod points, or to punish those who they feel are outside the trend and therefore need ridicule.. and perhaps this skews things into the scenarios you described.. I myself when modding do fall into this category, but give points to people who actually make "a point" with their comment.. sorry, but don't have any to give right now.

    If your interested in how some of this came about.. you might want to know that Linux was not always the popular kid on the block.. there was (and still is) a lot of bad information being presented as facts.. so I suppose that those of us who used Linux became somewhat a defensive group. On the other side with Windows users, you have people who have invested a lot of time learning what they know, who are unwilling to invest time in something else. These 2 stubborn groups have battled it out for years. Linux originally being the more obscure OS was more elitist in a sense.. and therefore more "nerdy", which appeals to those who think of themselves as "power users".. those Windows users who stuck with it for years suddenly found with the boom in PC's that there were more and more people finding their way around Windows and they felt themselves less of a "power user".. many of these people migrated to Linux.. Then with the distro's becoming increasingly easier to install (especially Ubuntu) well things just took off.

    Having not been involved with OSX or anyone that uses it.. I'll leave that alone.. but I think it's users have come from Apple, Windows, and Linux camps.. and I am sure it's a great operating system.. all these OS's require an investment in time learning.. so of course you will have defenders of them all.

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    waiting for ad.doubleclick.net
  187. Re:Linux has UAC too by AlexMax2742 · · Score: 1

    Are you being this ignorant on purpose, or is not attempting to comprehend what you're reading before you hit post normal for you?

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    I'm the guy with the unpopular opinion
  188. Re:Linux has UAC too by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

    You're blaming a product for the shoddiness of the Windows 9x line rather than those in charge of that product. You should try explaning your position better if you want a response that suits you.

  189. Warning: Known sockpuppet/troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    User maintains more than a dozen sockpuppet accounts on Slashdot.